Q
QSRDrums50
New member
it's Et tu, Brute? And you, Brutus?
Religockey/hockeyanityIt's a cosmic mash of religion and hockey.
sticking out tongue smiley needed
French. You could do better than French !"Et moi....."
which probably isn't even Latin, but it's the best I could do
I don't mute my vocals but I often use just one headphone piece so that I can hear in real space, my voice. That's another reason why I don't use reverb in tracking myself, I wouldn't be able to hear it. I've noticed time and time again that when tracking others, when they use only one headphone piece, they rarely sing off.Out of interest, does anyone else just mute their vocals?
Where I can. There's not many reverberant spaces in our flat. But in our tiled bathroom you get an interesting sound and sometimes {I've never worked out what makes it so because it isn't always so} in my kids room the drums have a reverb all of their own. In my job delivering, I go to all kinds of buildings and I'm always looking around, wondering what kind of sounds I'd get if I set up drums or acoustic guitars and stuff in them.I was wondering if anyone in the HR world ever tries to utilize real acoustic spaces...like long hallways or other spaces?
This has been done since the first recordings were made, and whenever an aux. send was available. (and even before that, a a parallel feed from the mike was sent to a 'reverb room', and the signal from the microphone there mixed back into the singers phones.. A little knowledge of the history of recording goes a long way.
I'm guessing that these days most people in the HR world are using soft sims. I was wondering if anyone in the HR world ever tries to utilize real acoustic spaces...like long hallways or other spaces?
I know there are some long standing pro studios that still have large echo chambers in use for certain sounds.
Of course for us HR people, it's not feasible to build them...but there is the possibility finding existing spaces to record in.
So yeah...does anyone here ever try stuff like that to get natural reverb...?
There are a lot of perfectionist (read that temperamental, usually) musicians out there who have had enough time in studio to want to hear themselves dry. If you are working with novice (to studio time) musicians, it is sometimes tempting to add a bunch of verb/delay to get them to like their vocals faster (cuts down on wasted time if they agree to the tracks), but the tracks are rarely better when recorded that way. Proper pitch, proper air, proper power can be best achieved dry.
Human hearing might, but do human beings ?Human hearing expects there to be some amount of audible reflection from the environment.
For most musicians, it's the space between the headphones.HHow many spaces are truly dead ?
For most musicians, it's the space between the headphones.![]()
Oh no he di'nt.
Human hearing might, but do human beings ?
Also, even when no reverb is put into someone's cans, if what you say is true, there must be some reflection. How many spaces are truly dead ?
For sure. That's certainly why I'll do it.I think the reason some people take one ear out of the headphones is to get some room sound that helps them hear themselves better.