B
Bob's Mods
New member
Chess, I am in agreement with you on that one. Those movie sound tracks can suck without compression. Keep your remote in hand for sure. Either the dialog is too soft or the explosions knock you out of your seat. That is an extreme example. My earlier point is modern close mic'd music is less dependant on compression than we believe. The dynamic range does not go from a whisper to an explosion (mostly). It exists in narrower range than that.
TravinFlor, so much stuff today is very over processed for sure. The music of the 50s, 60s,& 70s was done with a minimal amount of processing. They used quality rooms, pres, mics and placement to the fullest. There was no multiband compression at that time and the stuff still sounded good. A small amount of compression on the main bus works only on the deepest part of bass peak continuousely anyway. The rest of the spectrum, drum smacks, a power chord, a vocal peak may breach the compressor threshold from time to time and so becomes a peak controller in that part of the spectrum. When you push the threshold down into the body of the mix, you are changing the dynamics from the way they were originally recorded, this is really a distortion of the original waveform. Your brain kinda knows it in a funny way.
Jimstone, limiting is a good tool for intersepting a single peak or two where the ear won't hear the change. It is somewhat similar to compression but limiting does not shape the peak, limiting stops it from going any higher. You can bring up your mix but you won't have the control over the bass range that compression allows you to have.
I have looked a number of MP3s I've downloaded and many are pushing the mix to the rails, the upper and lower peaks are nearly flat! I've even seen this on pro recordings. This was a big no-no in the old days. It causes distortion and ear fatigue. Even though the tools of limiting and compression have a very wide range, its really a low level use of them thats req'd to control obnoxious peaks. If you want color then get a Urei 1176.
Bob
TravinFlor, so much stuff today is very over processed for sure. The music of the 50s, 60s,& 70s was done with a minimal amount of processing. They used quality rooms, pres, mics and placement to the fullest. There was no multiband compression at that time and the stuff still sounded good. A small amount of compression on the main bus works only on the deepest part of bass peak continuousely anyway. The rest of the spectrum, drum smacks, a power chord, a vocal peak may breach the compressor threshold from time to time and so becomes a peak controller in that part of the spectrum. When you push the threshold down into the body of the mix, you are changing the dynamics from the way they were originally recorded, this is really a distortion of the original waveform. Your brain kinda knows it in a funny way.
Jimstone, limiting is a good tool for intersepting a single peak or two where the ear won't hear the change. It is somewhat similar to compression but limiting does not shape the peak, limiting stops it from going any higher. You can bring up your mix but you won't have the control over the bass range that compression allows you to have.
I have looked a number of MP3s I've downloaded and many are pushing the mix to the rails, the upper and lower peaks are nearly flat! I've even seen this on pro recordings. This was a big no-no in the old days. It causes distortion and ear fatigue. Even though the tools of limiting and compression have a very wide range, its really a low level use of them thats req'd to control obnoxious peaks. If you want color then get a Urei 1176.
Bob