Home Recording

Go Back   Home Recording > General Discussions > Newbies


        

                                
                                10/30 - [video] Demo Roland TD-20SX
Reply    Audiofanzine Homestudio Homestudio News Homestudio Medias Homestudio Tests Homestudio Articles Homestudio User Reviews Homestudio Classifieds Ads
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 09-27-2007
adamthemute's Avatar
adamthemute adamthemute is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 6
Rep Power: 0
adamthemute is on a distinguished road
Why are my recordings so quiet?

I'm pretty new to recording so this may be a dumb question but, why are my recordings so quiet? I make sure every channel's peak is 0db, but apart from that I'm not mastering anything.

Does it have to do with compression or anything like that? Or maybe the quality of the stuff I'm using?

Many thanks.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 09-27-2007
Trell Blaze's Avatar
Trell Blaze Trell Blaze is offline
Killing generic R&B...
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Arkansas....moving to Texas in a few weeks...
Posts: 222
Rep Power: 15389
Trell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond reputeTrell Blaze has a reputation beyond repute
Quote:
Originally Posted by adamthemute View Post
I make sure every channel's peak is 0db, but apart from that I'm not mastering anything.


Many thanks.
That, sir, is very dangerous. Digital clipping is not a good friend to make in any situation.

Are you talking about your stereo mix not being loud or the individual tracks?

If you're wondering why your mix is not as loud as a commercial CD then yes, compression plays a part in this but I'd recommend you leave that particualar application of it to a skilled mastering engineer.

Concentrate on your mix sounding GOOD, not LOUD...
__________________
C:\Users\Trell Blaze\Desktop\Woodstock.jpgListen if u dare...I dare u... http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandID=749086
<<<NOW AVAILABLE ON SOUNDCLICK...WHO THE HELL THOUGHT THAT WOULD BE A COOL NAME FOR A MUSIC WEBSITE?
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 09-27-2007
adamthemute's Avatar
adamthemute adamthemute is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 6
Rep Power: 0
adamthemute is on a distinguished road
Awesome thanks. Someone showed me some very informative thread regarding 0dBVU and -18dBFS. It is kind of confusing.

I was under the impression that most mixers were analog and it's best the be peaking at 0dB.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 09-27-2007
bennychico11's Avatar
bennychico11 bennychico11 is offline
...
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 4,530
Rep Power: 78547
bennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond reputebennychico11 has a reputation beyond repute
Quote:
Originally Posted by adamthemute View Post
Awesome thanks. Someone showed me some very informative thread regarding 0dBVU and -18dBFS. It is kind of confusing.

I was under the impression that most mixers were analog and it's best the be peaking at 0dB.

in the analog world...yes. But it also depends on the meters you're using. Things can get pretty confusing fast, but if you're recording through a mixer and into a computer like most people here are, levels that read 0dBVU on your mixer should average out to around -18dBFS in the computer. Notice I said average....your peak levels may go quite a bit higher than that from time to time. You basically want to be safe when recording. You want to give yourself room to work with. Loud enough so that it registers on the meters, but not so loud that if the vocalist or musician hits one strong note that all of a sudden the entire take is ruined because of distortion.

When you're mixing, however, you need to realize of a few things that are going on. First of all, the meters in your computer are peak meters. They respond to quick transients in music. That's why a snare might read hotter on the meter than a guitar...but both sound to your ears as equally loud. What's going on here is your ear responds differently to sound than what your meter is showing you. Your ear doesn't recognize quick peaks as easily as long sustained loud sounds. So what might be going on in your mix is you have sudden transients in the mix (ie. snare drum) that are peaking your meters close to full scale. Forcing you to turn down the mix...making it quieter. So ideally if you are able to tame these peaks with compression, volume automation, etc. you'll have lower peaks and be able to turn up the rest of the tracks. But you have to learn how to balance between compressed peaks and a louder mix. Too compressed and it takes away from the quality of your mix. Just keep reading and practicing and you'll find that middle ground soon enough.

This might help you:
http://www.digido.com/bob-katz/level...es-part-1.html
__________________
www.redlabaudio.com
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump
Google
 

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
my recordings don't have depth! cokesodanotdrug Newbies 12 06-26-2006 09:44
Drum Recordings dcptnsdcvd Drums and Percussion 11 05-06-2002 12:45
Please help, my recordings are too quiet... matt's bedroom Newbies 5 04-15-2002 08:22
Need help... Recordings don't sound so good... timandjes Mixing / Mastering 4 04-09-2002 20:04
Antares Mic Modeler Rthodox Microphones 50 03-09-2002 07:49


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 05:20.


Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995-2008 Audiofanzine except where noted. All Rights Reserved.