
joeym
New member
This discussion is no use anymore....now we can all get EZ Mix!!!!!



I've read Ethan's stuff. I've studied with Marty McCann. I understand, at an intimate level, the effects and the importance of a decent room. I've understood those priniciples for a couple of decades now. You're still incorrect. You may garner a more accurate recording. But is it better? Questionable....enough so that I can tell you that by emphasizing the room uber alles, you're making a mistake.
The room is simply...a room. A poor room will detract from a recording...sure. Generally speaking, in my opninion, a good room does nothing other than get the hell out of the way. Talent can and does transcend a poor room. A good room is important...even desireable. The most important? I think not.
Again, don't confuse accurate with good.
Exactly. Give me a good musician everyday.
The notion of a good room can be pretty plastic. I seriously doubt anybody wants to track acoustic guitar in some of the settings John Bonham found perfect for tracking his drums.![]()
This jeff guy is funny!![]()
And right, agreed?
I agree with the main point of your post, True, but I'd put it out there that the beginning of engineering technique - especially for the home self-recorder - lies in the decision of whether to hit the record button or not, and if already hit, whether what was recorded was worth saving.Just by the forum the OP posted in, says this should be about great recording *technique*...which would not be about performance of artist..or even so much the room...but the performance of audio engineer...knowledge he posesses and skill level applied to the process..?
Amen, brother. In fact, I have a problem with people equating "virtuosity" solely with technical "showing off". That's just so Amadeus "too many notes" sounding of as definition to me. IMHO, "virtuoso" means having the ability to do the right thing well when the muse and the music calls for it, whether that means diving into it feet fist or laying back and just riding over the top of it.Noisewreck said:And I would go further and say that in many ways, doing simple stuff well, keeping it interesting and moving can be far more difficult than virtuoso technically perfect show-off stuff. It takes keen musicianship to pull off the simple stuff well.
Fuck no. You're way off-base, but I don't care.
Obviously not enough to stand behind your statements with any substance. Show me a great recording in a bad room.
I agree with the main point of your post, True, but I'd put it out there that the beginning of engineering technique - especially for the home self-recorder - lies in the decision of whether to hit the record button or not, and if already hit, whether what was recorded was worth saving.
Here's where I put the Nomex suit on, but it seems to me there's a whole lot of recording going on these days not for the sake of the music, but for the sake of the recording itself. When basing or starting one's technique under those kinds of priorities, there's a whole lot of Record and Save As buttons being pushed prematurely. And when people make their recording decisions that way, they shouldn't be too surprised if the result isn't often as good as they would like it to be regardless of the follow-up technique.
It's all about the music - or at least it's supposed to be. It's not really about the recording. Sure, we want to make as good a recording as we can afford and muster, but if the music ain't there, the rest is meaningless.
And conversely, if the performance is worth it, I'll put up with a bad room if I have to in order to capture the performance. I'd rather not have a bad room of course - I'm not advocating bad rooms - but good music in a bad room is far more valuable to me than bad music in a good room. I'll take Ella Fitzgerald with comb filtering and bad bass nodes over Taylor Swift in Nashville's best live room any day of the week. Amen, brother. In fact, I have a problem with people equating "virtuosity" solely with technical "showing off". That's just so Amadeus "too many notes" sounding of as definition to me. IMHO, "virtuoso" means having the ability to do the right thing well when the muse and the music calls for it, whether that means diving into it feet fist or laying back and just riding over the top of it.
G.
The entire "Exile On Main Street" album, "Nebraska", just about anything recorded at the original Stax Records, etc., etc.Obviously not enough to stand behind your statements with any substance. Show me a great recording in a bad room.
Notice the original poster said "Great recordings", .
After 30+ years, I finally rediscovered the secret to good recordings.
A great technical recording of something not worth listening to is not a good recording in my calculus. I can give you a fantastic recording of absolute silence, So what? there's no point to it. It's all about the music. Without that, the rest is meaningless. One cannot judge the recording while ignoring the content, they are a unified whole.Notice the original poster said "Great recordings", not great songs or musicianship.
"Pro" recording? What does that even mean. there's a whole shitload pf "pro" recordings made in expensive rooms that sound like crap.You either have a good enough room to get a *PRO* recording or you don't, it's really that simple.
Wanna bet? If there is a demand for the album and the budgeted time and money are used up, they'll release dog shit on a platter to make money. They might give Ella the needed time and budget, but not everybody is Ella, either.no way would a record label release it if the low frequency is smeared with booming frequenceis and flutter echo all over.