Prior to the 1980s, most
recording studios used
analog multitrack recorders, typically based on
reel-to-reel tape. The first commercial hard disk recording system was the Sample-to-Disk 16-bit, 50 kHz
digital recording option for the
New England Digital Synclavier II in 1982.
Stereo audio was not immediately available due to data input and output limitations on hard drives of that time. The high cost and limited capacity of these solutions limited their use to large
professional audio recording studios, and even then, they were usually reserved for specific applications such as
film post-production. With the arrival of the
compact disc in 1982, digital recording became a major area of development by equipment makers. Several affordable solutions were released during the late 1980s and early 90s; many of these continued to use tape, either in reels or in more manageable
videocassettes. In 1993, iZ Technology Corporation developed
RADAR (Random Access Digital Audio Recorder distributed by
Otari), designed to replace 24-track tape machines. By the mid-1990s, with the steady decline of hard disk prices and the corresponding increases in capacity and portability, the cost of hard disk recording systems had dropped to the point where they became affordable for even smaller studios. Hard disk systems have since become the preferred method for studio recording. On January 14, 2004, Engineers from Fairlight,
WaveFrame and
AMS were awarded
Academy Scientific and Technical Awards for the development of hard disk recording technology ==Operation==