
NL5
Unpossible!
In my example, I put arrangement/performance/instrument sound into one lump of "the band". 

You are completely ignoring 500+ years of musical history. I recommend a music history book, seriously. Very interesting stuff: lots of composers dealt with the same stuff we do today. Handel was caught up in publishing lawsuits, most of them were.
EVERY generation falls into the same trap that you do. The piano was going to kill music, so was the invention of recording. People in 1820 thought Beethoven Symphony #9 was a piece of crap. The critic at the premiere of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto said " This is music that stinks to the ear".
As I said earlier, Bach was completely forgotten until the mid 1800s. Umm, he was born in 1685.
The golden age of Television? Seinfeld is as good as all the shows, whether one sees it or not. There will always be good Movies, Music, Artists, plays, musicals. From now until the end of time. The older generation HATED Elvis and the Beatles. They thought it was the death of music and nobody could hold a candle to Sinatra. They were wrong. They always are.![]()
In order of importance (IMHO), more or less, from most important at the top to least important at the bottom:
1. The performer/performance quality
2. The quality of the engineers/producers
3. Acoustic quality of the recording spaces
4. Microphone quality/selection
5. Preamp quality/selection
6a. Recorder quality (if going analog)
6d. Converter quality (if going digital)
7. Monitoring chain quality
8. Everything else
YOMV
G.
"When you are able to A/B analogue and digital, which we could do in this case, there's simply no comparison. The top end is so sweet and beautiful. I've never heard anyone say about digital, even at 24-bit/96kHz or 192kHz: 'Isn't the top end as sweet and beautiful as you've ever heard?' You don't because digital just doesn't sound that way." [/I]
--Elliot Scheiner - Sound on Sound Magazine, Aug 2003[/B]
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Yeah, there's a level playing field all right, but not in the way you probably mean. The bar was lowered to level the field. It’s pretty much the way Walter Sear says it...
"As the professional studios switched to digital recording, the sound got so bad that anyone could do it as badly at home using the same equipment or the newer, cheaper home digital multi-tracks. They got the same terrible,unmusical results. Why spend money on a professional studio if you could do the same thing at home."
- Walter E. Sear
What have They Done to My Art?
Interesting quote. But all they're saying is they prefer the sound of the recording after it's been coloured by tape. The digital recording is a more accurate representation of what came through the mics & pres. You gotta colour in in yourself
Who'd win in a driving competition: Michael Andretti driving a Chevy Impala, or a student driver in an Indy race car? The student driver might make it to either the service garage or the hospital first.
There ya go! Hmmm...is that an example of life imitating Internet?Years ago in one of the car rags, the author had a Supra on a Toyota test track, and I believe it happened to be Dan Gurney on the track the same day in a Corolla.
Gurney passed him![]()
That's like saying sex IS watching bad porn on VHSLife IS the internet. *har har har*
That's like saying sex IS watching bad porn on VHS.
G.
Exactly!
If some dork wants to tape his farts and sell it on CD baby, more power to him. He's not gonna be cutting into my Classical crossover-Stravinskyesque audience one bit. He's gonna press 500 CDs and keep 490 of them in a box under his bed.
What compression settings would you recommend for a 9am beer fart? I feel one coming on, and I'm standing in the control room.
That's like saying sex IS watching bad porn on VHS.
G.
What compression settings would you recommend for a 9am beer fart? I feel one coming on, and I'm standing in the control room.
Unfortunately I dont know much about compression, sorry.However, it is crucial that you use analog tape. Digital wont capture the warmth and moisture of the aforementioned anal vapor.
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