Home Recording's Dirty Little Secret

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What were your home recording expectations vs commercial high end studio recordings?


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Moving along.....

All rightee then.....

The idea here is trying to create as close as possible commercial grade mixes on a budget. Learning tricks that help getting there. Beck, you have a knack for knowing where the soft under belly is and going for it. You lay a trap for the unweary. We, the unknowing chelas, are seeking nuggetts of wisdom from the elders...not to sit by while the Gods throw lightning bolts at each other. Digital in the dungeon, where us hobbyist dwell, can be a pretty ugly place as many of us have come to learn. We need to evolve and grow (without creating a US Government size budget deficit). These exchanges and defensive posturing rebuttals are not contributing to the spirit of where the collective "we" wish to go...recording nirvana. Lets try and keep this on track with constructive tips. Lets all play nice now.

SG....your comment on distortion has been noted by me. Your comments on playback helpful. Its not just me then, its everyone who has the playback issue. It just does not sound the same coming out as does going in for sure. The distortion quality that I am referring to is truly a product of the device creating it....it is bad distortion...garbage in...garbage out. My trick using the MXR Distortion III in conjunction with Boogex has fixed this problem for me. What will really fix the problem is a respectable tube amp with a good distortion pedal like the MXR Distortion III. A decent tube amp always works better with a decent distortion pedal. Transistor amp/simulators with or without distortion pedals, even expensive ones, never deliver the sweet distortion that comes from tubes. Mind you, not all tube amps are worthy either. Some are just plain junky. If there is anyone who wishes to hear the demo recording I made using the Mesa amp.....

http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?fid=10980

This really is not a recording issue but more an issue with the majority low end junk that crawls around out there seeking the unknowing. My ears are pretty tuned to guitar distortion. For those seeking a low end distortion solution I recommend the MXR distortion III. It records direct very well...and if you don't like it....you can sell it! CueBassMan...you hit it...this is about low end solutions to common problems we all face as 2nd bedroom home wreckers!

Lets move on with more common problems and band aids for them. Yes, there is a ton of both digital and analog low end junk out there. This does not mean total analog is the solution. There are diamonds in the rough to be found. Separating the wheat from the chaff is my...no our mission.

Bob
 
I don't get it. southside glen's and beck's posts have both been among the more helpful to me since I've been around the board. Looking at southside's first post he seems to be saying much the same thing beck has said later. It seems like glen was a little overdoing it first against beck and beck reacted better than I would have but still with a flamethrower if you don't mind my saying. Maybe great minds don't always think alike but they are still great minds.

I'm sad that these two guys with so much experience and so much to offer seem to be shooting first and asking questions later. I hope the case is they both feel offended by a misunderstanding and have said some things they don't mean about the other. :(

I don't know or care that much about the technical side of this conversation but I agree with beck about how some people resist dissimilar views and IMHO to their loss. It's not fair that some people have to spend so much energy warding off attacks because of their out of the ordinary views. Some of you guys make it impossible to learn anything more than you already know. Sorry someone had to say it.

Great, all I need right now is for both these guys to hate me. Probably not I hope.

Ok back to the subject. I care a lot about hearing different ideas to improve my recording skills and that's why this thread caught my eye. I don't care much for the self-appointed censors.
 
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I don't know or care that much about the technical side of this conversation but I agree with beck about how people resist dissimilar views and IMHO to their loss.

Well, you should care, because this is a technical discussion. I am completely disinterested in the personalities in question. Why? Because every assertion about digital in this thread can be tested. I don't resist dissimilar views, I test them. If they are proven wrong, then I discard them.

Every single statement here can be shown true or false. Not by me, not by Glen, or Beck, but yes, by you. Take your gear and software and test everything I have said, Glen has said, Beck has said, etc., and test it.

Scientifically, that is. Hard science, not soft science. Experiment, not anecdote. Figure out how you can measure it, and do the test yourself. Don't take anybody's word for it.

That's the beauty of hard science . . . it's all testable, and nothing about digital audio is so exotic that you can't discover the truth for yourself, in your own studio.
 
I sang live for years before getting into home recording. I guess I forgot to mention I am very disappointed with the sound of some of the latest and greatest compared to the sound my dad got 20 years ago with his tape decks.

When I said I don't know or care about the technical stuff I mean I don't know a lot about how things work like you or beck or southside. I don't know much about how my car works either but I'm a great driver. No tickets. ;)

I have an old soundcraft mixer that my dad gave me. It’s the best thing I have even though it's too big for my living space. I had a roland disk recorder and now a daw with protools. It gives me nothing but headaches. I mean literally. The stuff on the radio hurts my teeth. I’m not kidding. :( It wasn’t always this bad. What is going on? That’s all I want to know so I can avoid whatever it is that is making the music I used to enjoy so hard to listen to.
 
For those who may be interested I've got a link to the most recent demo I've done using all my know how and bag of tricks. This was done in my small room with modest gear and not so expensive software. Its only a demo of possibilities and I made no effort to fancy it up none. To me, it comes close to a commercial studio sound...or maybe just tugs at the coat strings of said sound. Still, its musical and listenable. Could a PortaStudio do this? And this is only an MP3.

http://www.lightningmp3.com/live/file.php?fid=10981

Bob the Mod Guy.
 
Evangelizing, eh? :D
C'mon Beck, my man, let's be honest here. That is *exactly* what you spend 90% of your time on this BBS doing. I'm not trying to claim that in and of itself is a bad thing; I've come to you for advice in the past because I respect your knowledge and experinece in things analog, and you have been very helpful, and I have been very appreciative.

But whether you realize it of not - and I suspect that inside you do - you do present yourself to others as one who is on the front line of preaching the analog gospel with the desire and goal to see it regain it's place as unquestioned king of the mountain. I have only rarely seen you on this BBS outside of the analog forum, and those times that you are (like now) it's been strictly to either advocate analog, bash digital, or both.
Of all the issues in recording, nothing is as religious in nature as the so-called “Digital Revolution” and the misconceptions that perpetuate it.
Except those with equal fervor on the other side if the analog/digital religious war as well.

And I don't appreciate you lumping me in with the mis- or poorly-informed zealots on either side of that idiotic war. I am on record several times over as saying neither one is intrinsically "better" overall than the other, and for either side to claim so is just silly.

I'm tired of Evangelical Republicans branding me as a liberal Democrat at the same time that San Francisco Democrats brand me as too conservative for my own good, let alone the common good, and I'm not going to accept you lumping me in with the extremists in the "digital revolution" just because I recognize that the Emperor called Analog isn't wearing quite as many layers of clothes as you and your friends would like me to believe. I thought the "if your not with us, your against us" mentality died with Bushes credibility a few years ago.
In fact your idea applies to the gullibility of many members on these forums in accepting any and all digital mythology.
I agree with that. The Internet is filled with self-perpetuating myths and wikialities on the digital side. The same is true of analog. Mythology and religious fervor play no favorites on this issue.
I’m a genealogist, an ardent skeptic with a degree in social science. My sources are well researched. My survey methods are sound… my standards high, and my background in recording goes back nearly 30 years and to the present in all areas relating to sound recording, not simply analog/digital issues.
I don't want to turn this into a dick waving contest, beck, but I also have been at this since 1979, working both the analog and digital sides on the amateur and pro levels in audio, video and product development. Add to that honors degrees in computer science with minors in information science and physics, with a couple of semesters of electronics engineering thrown in for good measure.

We've both been around the block more than a few times, so let's stop waving our dicks at each other, and try and keep the debate on topic, shall we?
What’s’ happening is that you and a couple others are trying to converse using freshmen level understanding… that is very clear. At that level it is all very blue-sky marketing brochure stuff. And for that reason perhaps I shouldn’t try to engage you at the graduate level. You seem to be completely unaware of issues that are regularly discussed in professional circles..
Ummm, now that you have seen that your dick is no bigger than mine, you might want to reconsider that.

30 (well, OK, 29) years ago, when I built my first analog home studio (with homebrew digital control, though that had nothing to do with the sound itself), my day job was in sales and marketing of things audio and video. I left sales and marketing within 3 years and vowed never to return because I hate the total bullshit surrounding those fields. If you strayed out of the analog forum once in a while you'd know my utter disdain for marketing tactics and their total raping of the truth, for once again I am on record on these forums more times than I can count fighting against such bullshit. The whole studio in a box promise that you can buy this software tonight and sound like a rock star tomorrow expectation that are set nowdays are a big part of the problem for which this thread was originally started.
My grasp of digital recording goes to the very core and is as up to date and forward-looking as Tomorrow's concepts. You don’t recognize my terminology, nor can you engage in a technical discussion, but that’s because you haven’t arrived, not because I don’t understand. It is the digital lemmings that are out of the loop.
Well, so far in this thread you have piled up the uninformed bullshit deeper than a 2" tape. To wit:

- that the physical interleave format of digital WAV and CDA files somehow corrupts the original stereo image encoded into that file. False. I have explained this is NO UNCERTAIN TERMS earlier in this thread; there is no way in this universe that the structure of the file could possibly have anything whatsoever to do with that. If you spent some four years as an engineer in audio software product development actually diving inside of the file formats and pulling out their guts the way that I have, you might understand with the certainty that I have.

- that the Nyquist theorum is all about minimum sample rate to avoid aliasing. False. Nyquist only peripherally even had audio in mind when he developed his theorum, and aliasing was little more than a complication or sidebar to be addressed and answered by the theorum. The whole purpose of Nyquist had to do with information theory in general and the ability to communicate analog information digitally. The Nyquist frequency is best definied as the minimum sample rate frequency required to be able to losslessly reconstruct an analog signal of limited bandwidth from the digital samples. Whether this was/is applied to audio, television signal transmission, telephoninc facimilie transmisison, digital multiplexing, or any other specific form of communication is simply use of the theorum after the fact in actual application, and not the one vertical application that Nyquist was specifically concerned with when he designed his theorum. And the idea of any aliasing issues is just one factor to be considered that the Theorum had to handle properly in order to work, not the main thesis or target of the theorum.

There are maybe 50 people on the entire Internet who honestly claim to know exactly the Nyquist Theorum in and out (I do not claim to be one of them). Of those 50, 40 are either erroneous or lying. But of those 40, 100% try to make it out as being much simpler than it actually is.

- That digital conversion, in and of itself, causes an unnatural corruption of the stereophonic field any worse than analog does. Even more so, that this is factual "common knowledge" amongest any engineer with any experience. I gotta tell ya, Beck, in all my years working in both analog and digital (yes I work and have worked both sides of the fence also), the only place I have ever heard that at all is amongst the more zealous of the analophiles on the Internet. I have worked with broadcast engineers and lifelong members of the AES, people who have analog coursing through teir veins, but who are realists all the same, who when they hear stuff like that just shudder and shake their heads in disgust.

Stereophony is encoded in the method of capture and in the playback setup. The only way outside of that the field image can be fucked with is by playing with delays and phase relationships between the two channels. Even then, the actions necessary to artifically collapse the field would have to be specific to that collapse effect; i.e. the delays and phase interrelations would have to be of a nature where they specifically pushed the field inward.

To say that by it's inherent nature, that the digital encoding process itself can and regularly does do that is ludicrous. If, IF such an effect were happening, it would have to be almost entirely attributable to some other factor than the theoretical process itself. It most CERTAINLY has zero to do with digital stereo storage formats as you offered earlier.

I alread went in some detail on other possible influence that acn fuck with the stereo image in digital, but all of those are attributable to bad mechanical implementation, not to the digital process istelf, and are all correctable. But here's another couple of posibilities to consider (I'm not saying they are true, necessarily, but they are potential variables to consider):

- The percentage of engineeers/CRs using nearfield monitoring exclusively vs. those that use partial or complete use of room-address (far-field) loudspeakers is greater in the digital realm than in the analog realm. Even with diffusion and absorption acoutics, CRs are not anechoic chambers, they do play a part in the overall imaging. The use of far field monitoring does allow the image to "mature" better than nearfields do. "Old school" engineers in "old school" CRs are mre apt to be exposed to this than those running strictly a PT rig on nearfields.

- As I demonstrated earlier in the thread, there is nothing "natural" about a stereophonic image to begin with, regardless of whether it's recorded with analog, digital or smoke signal. Any perceived "wider" image in analog is not relly going to be any closer to the truth than digital will. You will most likely repond to that by saying something along the lines of, "but it DOES sound better". Which leads right into th next point...
I prefer analog, but that’s because I also use digital…. a fact you appear to be deliberately ignoring.
No more or less than you are ignoring the fact that I too am "bi" (;)), and yet I play no favorites. I use the best tool for the job, and I don't find analog to always be the best tool or even the best sound. For example:

- Tell me to produce Yo Yo Ma, and I'll definitely want to lean analog.
- Tell me to produce Moby, and I'll definitely want to lean digital.
- Tell me to produce James Brown and I won't give a shit which bottle I use to catch the lightning, as long as it has a cap on it :).

What I notice most is that you admit that you "prefer analog". And there's nothing wrong with that. I don't prefer either, or maybe better, my preference are context-based, not absolute. I see nothing wrong with that either. That doesn't make either one of us right or wrong. That just demonstrates a bias difference (and not the same one you accuse me of, either.)
I know very few analog fans that haven’t made a true choice when looking at analog and digital solutions. In contrast, most digital users, especially at this level, have made no choice at all because they don’t know anything about analog.
Don't lump me in with them. I've been analog since the days of the Tascam 144, the TEAC A3340 and the Pioneer RT1020L. I also have experience using Otari, Sony, Studer and Studer/Revox (yes, the days of both names on one machine) analog open reel machines in formats from mono to 16 track. I've more than tasted the analog koolaid, and I quite like it. Just don't ask me to put arsenic in that koolaid and drink it along with you, any more than you would expect me to do the same with the digital flavored koolaid.
You’re repeating what I’ve heard over and over in brochures, mags and web forums for years.
Do you still believe after this post - if you have made it this far ;) :D - that what I am saying to you and what you are hearing from me are the same thing?
Of course there will be misunderstandings and disagreement, but you’re obviously getting frustrated and I might add, you went personal, ugly and began shedding more heat than light on the subject very early in the thread. I've heard tell of this behavior of yours from other members, but never experienced it until this thread.
Yeah, I know exactly who you probably heard it from, too. Forums are a great place to make inadvertant enemies of people who can't stand the heat of debate. I don't have time to worry about them, life is too short.

What I find facinating, beck, is that you accuse me of the very behavior you are exhibiting. You were tossing heat back and forth with terra mortim long before you got into it with me (BTW, terra is one of those that got pissed at me within two days of his joining the board, and I have to my knowledge never recovered :o. What can I say, ya can't make everyone happy all the time.)

We both claim to be fighting off the myth dragons, the problem is, we have differing views of just who the dragon is. You see digital as the dragon, ad I see zealotry and disinformation one way or the other as being the dragon.
This thread alone... even just the title would be a threat to you whether I had chimed in or not.
This I don't get. This thread had and has, except for your contributions, nothing to do with analog vs. digital. It had/has everything to do with expectations of home recording. Even all-digital pro productions on average are of higher quality than amateur recordings. NOTE I said "on average"; there are always exceptions. Nevertheless, any analog vs. digital debate is low on any list of reasons for an expectations let down regarding this topic. But as to how it's just about all you ever talk about, God forbid those that are not with you, fore they therefore must be against you.

G.
 
Still, its musical and listenable. Could a PortaStudio do this? And this is only an MP3.
\

Portas are good at dumping everything above 16kHz, and so are mp3s! So I'd say yes!

Seriously, there aren't too many tracks there, you could do it with a Porta, but you'd have to make a lot of early decisions. You'd have to record the drums in a stereo submix, either with the bass and rhythm guitars, or do a bounce of them later. You'd need to rope in the bass and snare, which are sticking out a little. You would have a harder time fixing them later. You'd have to watch your tracking levels and mind the noise floor.

The issue of this thread, and how to make that track better have nothing to do with analog vs. digital though. What I hear is mostly indicating room treatment as the next step.

In fact I just told a guy today who wanted a custom mic to eliminate room nodes and noise, dude, don't spend money with me, go buy some rigid fiberglass insulation.

Acoustic problems are generally best solved acoustically rather than electrically . . .
 
The point is, IMO the music scene sucks and I have some hope that a remnant of informed people will revive it some day.

Outta curiousity, are you actually IN the music scene? Do you know what the
"music scene" is? And if you do, can you please explain it to me? Cause I have no clue what the hell you are talking about.

The "music scene" is like saying "the people scene", it is unfathomable how enormous it is. If you think the "music scene" sucks because of a switch to a format that 99.99% of people feel is superior, you should head to a shrink. Not tomorrow, now. Wake one up if you need to.

The "music scene" has never been better. If your idea of the music scene is clearchannel, kill your radio and get to a concert hall asap.
 
Evangelizing, eh? :D

I've been on the other side of that, when I lectured on destructive cults and how to avoid them to incoming college students in the late 80’s. The psychology of cults and other extremist groups… just another interest of mine.

Of all the issues in recording, nothing is as religious in nature as the so-called “Digital Revolution” and the misconceptions that perpetuate it. The religious fervor that surrounded it (and still surrounds it) was overwhelming as a social movement. And of course anyone that might have suggested a plug-in, a pre, or some digital solution in response to the OP is not evangelizing because they are adhering to acceptable cult dogma. ;)


It’s quite the opposite of what you say, Glen. Your comment that I “Believe almost any piece of information that floats down the sewer pipes of the Internet that is pro analog and/or anti-digital” is simply untrue. In fact your idea applies to the gullibility of many members on these forums in accepting any and all digital mythology.

I’m a genealogist, an ardent skeptic with a degree in social science. My sources are well researched. My survey methods are sound… my standards high, and my background in recording goes back nearly 30 years and to the present in all areas relating to sound recording, not simply analog/digital issues.

A solid foundation is what so many people that have grown up on these forums are lacking. That’s why I regularly point people away from the forums until they know enough to navigate them with success. I don’t ask people to take my word for it. I know the data and information is out there for them to make up their own minds. They may come around after some time and say, “Eh, Beck was right about this or that” and that’s fine, but not the point of it all. It's more likely they will forget who said what during the course of a thread.

The point is, IMO the music scene sucks and I have some hope that a remnant of informed people will revive it some day.

What’s’ happening is that you and a couple others are trying to converse using freshmen level understanding… that is very clear. At that level it is all very blue-sky marketing brochure stuff. And for that reason perhaps I shouldn’t try to engage you at the graduate level. You seem to be completely unaware of issues that are regularly discussed in professional circles.

My grasp of digital recording goes to the very core and is as up to date and forward-looking as Tomorrow's concepts. You don’t recognize my terminology, nor can you engage in a technical discussion, but that’s because you haven’t arrived, not because I don’t understand. It is the digital lemmings that are out of the loop.

I prefer analog, but that’s because I also use digital…. a fact you appear to be deliberately ignoring. I guess it doesn’t fit with your neat little paradigm in which analog guys are just ghosts from the past that don’t get it. I know very few analog fans that haven’t made a true choice when looking at analog and digital solutions. In contrast, most digital users, especially at this level, have made no choice at all because they don’t know anything about analog.

You’re repeating what I’ve heard over and over in brochures, mags and web forums for years. According to these you are indeed in the majority.

Of course there will be misunderstandings and disagreement, but you’re obviously getting frustrated and I might add, you went personal, ugly and began shedding more heat than light on the subject very early in the thread. I've heard tell of this behavior of yours from other members, but never experienced it until this thread.

I think you can do better than that, unless of course you are one of those that have something to lose in an open examination and frank discussion of how digital promises have failed to deliver and continue to fail. This thread alone... even just the title would be a threat to you whether I had chimed in or not.

Insults and other social pressure won’t work on me… they never have. Therefore, you have to keep the discussion on topic. Tell us something you know other than that you think I’m wrong and outdated. Judging from your replies you should be asking questions rather than making so many declarations and accusations. You don’t seem at all interested in elaboration, feedback or clarification, which are crucial to productive debate.

Those that try to twist my arm through insults and other social control tell me more about how they developed their own points of view…likely through social pressure, as opposed to technical understanding.

This thread started with a question form the OP. Many people have chimed in with ideas and solutions. My answer may not be what you want to hear, but it is my contribution nonetheless, and as always some will benefit from learning something they didn’t know before... but only if they consider music/recording important enough to do follow-up research.

These things should be treated as investigations… Tips and leads are gathered from various people and then the onus is on the reader to look into the options. If you have any sense, that means sources other than web forums. With forums you're always going to have a few strong, opinionated personalities with the rest running around trying to decide whom to follow. That is no way to learn the ins and outs of recording.

And to cusebassman... no, I use carefully selected semi-pro analog gear, and have always supported the notion that one can get professional results with modest equipment, if they know what they're doing... and I've said as mush even on this thread. You and many others at this point in a thread just can't keep up with the positions already stated and stated again by various members.

TIP: When reading a thread, don't let one member define the perspective of another member. Go back and read what each has actually said and believes.

Speaking of which, I'll challenge anyone to a game of Simon. But let me warn you, the batteries will fail before I do. Another curse that makes these discussions a bit annoying to me.

As has been said over and over... You are very outdated in your knowledge of digital...actually, it's come full circle, where the latest marketing ploys are analog this analog that...get that analog sound with this Berhinger Dildometer 6000 (mark 2).

The myth of the magic analog wonder studio has never been so big. You know the one...the one that no matter what you do, will make you hit records, every time...and you'll play just like the old time greats. That piece of shit bit of electronics that no one wanted back in the day, but someone used it on a revered recording, so now it's like the holy grail, going for insane prices.

From every person on here, they said...yeah analog is great, yeah digital is great...so who is the one who is delusional. At least we all can get a result from both formats. (and I don't mean digital outboard gear on a pure analog recording..talking purely computer based recording)

I hate to break it to you Beck, but there are a huge range of folks on here, from new blood to people who have been doing it for a long time, even some people who have worked with some pretty hefty groups (like Farview)

I also hate to break it to you, but as grand as we all like to make the nerding around of audio engineering...it makes absolutely no difference to what is good music, and/or music people will love/buy/cherish forever. The producer has a lot to do with it as the closest related to audio, however it doesn't amount to a shit heap what you record it on, or even how good it sounds...in reality...beyond our little geek circles, nobody gives a shit, and never will.

You're very misguided to assume that everyone in discussion with you is at a low level of understanding...in fact, if I'm not mistaken you've been proven wrong with something called "fact" over and over, by people who know more of what their talking about than "I like the sound of analog, and there's a few quotes I found of people who said the same thing, so that means I'm right."

This thread started as a discussion, which is what it remains... stop whining because people aren't agreeing with you. You're basing subjective opinions as some sort of "universal knowledge" of all of the "elite". The truth is that at the upper end of the audio industry there are people using analog tape, people using computers, people using digital tape, people using hard disk based multi tracks. There are no "universal truths," and if you have as much of a mind for sociology as you claim, you would understand this. You would understand more of the nature of subjective reality, the nature of personal bias... unless you actually do understand this, and are pulling our legs.

Your argument of web forums, while is correct, doesn't apply to anything in this particular discussion. There was no attempt by anyone to claim that you are wrong because "the forums said so". You are wrong because that is what is in reality. Whether you walk into a studio that's world class or log on to a forum, if you spout that kind of crap, you will be told how wrong you are.

You are suffering delusions of grandeur. You view yourself as an all knowing fountain of knowledge for which the world should learn from. Someone who has it all figured out, no room to grow, no way to be wrong. You have somehow convinced yourself that you are among the finest minds, and ears on the planet, and the whole world is full of shit but you... Does this sound like a healthy mindset? I mean for fucks sake, I bet you're really really short, because you're Napoleon syndrome is one of the worst I've seen, without the aide of purely sarcasm and jest.

You're wrong. Admit it. You've created this imaginary world around you, filled with some "universal knowledge" that, strangely enough, only seems to be mentioned when you bring it up. Hallucinating that giant multitudes of top drawer audio experts are all engaged in this subject often at this time. Have you gotten your head checked? These are starting to sound like symptoms of schizophrenia, to be honest. Do the voices tell you what the experts are talking about? Do they feed you the sacred knowledge of the audio gods via radio waves? Do you ever want to hurt people? Do ever see things that aren't there?

I haven't seen anyone who hasn't understood any terminology that you've mentioned, and I haven't seen much in the way of forward thinking on your part (you're using examples that are so outdated, that it SHOWS that you don't really bother with the computer recording market, and haven't for some time) If I had never taken analog tape seriously, and had the mindset you do, I'd probably be just as misinformed.
 
Outta curiousity, are you actually IN the music scene? Do you know what the
"music scene" is? And if you do, can you please explain it to me? Cause I have no clue what the hell you are talking about.

The "music scene" is like saying "the people scene", it is unfathomable how enormous it is. If you think the "music scene" sucks because of a switch to a format that 99.99% of people feel is superior, you should head to a shrink. Not tomorrow, now. Wake one up if you need to.

The "music scene" has never been better. If your idea of the music scene is clearchannel, kill your radio and get to a concert hall asap.

lol you are so right man. Even with THE music scene...which one... the Death Metal music scene in Vatican City? The Waltz scene in Iraq? WHAT?! lol
 
\

Portas are good at dumping everything above 16kHz, and so are mp3s! So I'd say yes!

Seriously, there aren't too many tracks there, you could do it with a Porta, but you'd have to make a lot of early decisions. You'd have to record the drums in a stereo submix, either with the bass and rhythm guitars, or do a bounce of them later. You'd need to rope in the bass and snare, which are sticking out a little. You would have a harder time fixing them later. You'd have to watch your tracking levels and mind the noise floor.

The issue of this thread, and how to make that track better have nothing to do with analog vs. digital though. What I hear is mostly indicating room treatment as the next step.

In fact I just told a guy today who wanted a custom mic to eliminate room nodes and noise, dude, don't spend money with me, go buy some rigid fiberglass insulation.

Acoustic problems are generally best solved acoustically rather than electrically . . .

Msh...that was done in my little bedroom. The drums were GigaStudio. I played all guitars. The bass was mic'd from a cheap little bass amp. Normally I go direct with the bass guitar. More and more, I've been working on trying to do credible direct in recording. Why? Because the setup is fast and the volume level is within reason. Its easier. Most anytime you can do it no matter whats happening in the rest of the house. Even with headphones. Mic'ing a cab is still important however and must be done. For those who record acoustic guitars, me included, get a Taylor with the ES system. The ES system records direct and sounds natural. It doesn't have to be a top end Taylor either, even a used one will do. The ES system has two great sounding dynamic mics built in. The less you have to set up and track, the more you can go direct, the easier your life will be. For instance, I've sold off my tube mic. It was just more to set up. I'm trying to keep this recording thing as simple as I can yet make it sound great at the same time. Lets face it, we're not a paid studio. We have limited time and money. Its not always easy to set up an screw with mics if the kids are screaming. My whole mantra is to help the little guy who lives in a small apartment in the Bronx, with limited space, time, money and ability to use volume, to get super tracks and mixes. This guy in the Bronx really can't treat his room, maybe hang some moving company blankets around the room but that is all. The only way I know of to band-aid untreated room resonance is use a decent software parametric EQ and notch it out. SG has mentioned this technique before. Another advantage to going direct is room resonance is no longer a factor. Its about doing more with less.

Many home reckers want to sound as good as they can, with quick and simple techniques, without breaking the bank. Thats where I'm at. There is all this stuff out there about mic, mic, mic, this and that. I recommend a small group of general purpose non tube mics for simplicity. Not a crazy selection. Again, this is an area where home recording can get out of control from all the hype in forums and advertising. Newbies think they have to have a ton of low end mics based all they read on forums like these. Most of the time you'll end up using your "go to" mics. The trick is finding these "go to" mics early on and use the balance of your cash to get a better something else.

Bob
 
Many home reckers want to sound as good as they can, with quick and simple techniques, without breaking the bank.
Bob

Well said. That's all I'm looking for. Like I said before, if I can get a reasonable representation of what's in my head to come out of someone else's speakers I'm thrilled. :cool:
 
Many home reckers want to sound as good as they can, with quick and simple techniques, without breaking the bank.
Not to sound trite, Bob, but that's what everybody would like, from the alchemists who beleived one could turn lead into gold to the lotto players who want a ten million to one return on their investment without having to do anything but dirve to their local gas station. It's called a "free lunch", and there is no such thing in this universe.

The key #1, IMHO (FWTW ;) ), is getting a well-trained ear. Knowing how to listen and what to listen for. This is not something that can be bought or learned from an Internet post. Like building up muscle, it has to be worked for.

Then key #2 is learning - I mean really LEARNING - your gear. Not just what it does, but HOW and WHY it does it, and using skill #1 to determine what it really sounds like when used for this or that purpose under this or that condition.

Then, #3, is applying skills 1 and 2 to a setup that is purposely and purposefully gain structured to get the most out of the signal chain one does have. This is a little easier; learning the basics of gain structure is not all that hard. But it does require masteriy of #2 to know just how one's gear affects that structure, and when and where it's advantageous to use that gear to follow "proper" gain structure or purposely "break the rules" of gain structure here or there to acheinve a particular effect.

None of this can be bought. Only a little of it can be learned by talking to others. All of it is attainable to anybody with a properly-functioning eardrum through practice, study, practice, expipiment and practice.
Newbies think they have to have a ton of low end mics based all they read on forums like these. Most of the time you'll end up using your "go to" mics.
You're abolutely right about that. They fall for the trap that as long as you have an LDC that mimics the look of the Big Boy mics, you're golden. The just don't get that there's a reason why some mics cost $200 and others cost $2000, even though they look pretty much the same. It's not always just marketing or boutiquing, it's usually because has a $200 sound and the other has a $2000 sound.
The trick is finding these "go to" mics early on and use the balance of your cash to get a better something else.
Like room treatments :D. (Sorry, Bob, had to nudge that one in there ;) :D)

There are plenty of decent "go-to" mics that can serve as great general purpose microphones and give a better, more "professional" sound (so to speak) than just the standard SM57s and such, and are going to kick supreme ass over most of the cheap Chinese condensors from MXL, Rode and such that are all the rage amongst the home wreckers these days.. They are going to cost a bit more, but they're nowhere near as expensive as the big boy LDCs and ribbons.

Look into LDDs (large-diameter dynamic midrophones) for a great example. I find the EV RE-20 ($399 new) to be servicable for just about anything from kick drum to vocals, and is one of my favorite microphones all around. The Sennheiser MD421 ($349 new) is a very nice instrument mic for anything from guitar cabs to rack toms to saxaphones and coronets. The Sure SM7B ($349 new) would fit in the same class with these guys as well.

And as far as big condensors and ribbons, Companies like Mojave Audio and AEA and others make some very good microphones that can compete on the A-game level with the big boys for quite bargain prices, relatively speaking (e.g. $2000+ -sounding performance for under a grand).

G.
 
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Well, Gigastudio definitely won't run on a Porta!

I agree, it is not necessary to have a ton of gear. I also always record bass and electric guitar direct. But mainly I like to record a lot of acoustic instruments, so I do need microphones.

I could live with exactly four mics, if I had to. A pair of SDCs, ideally switchable pattern (which I leave on omni ;)), a LDC, and a good dynamic. And it so happens that I had that, at least until I sold my M88 (my favorite among the SM7/MD421 crowd--never tried the RE20). But someday I'll buy another one.

I have a few others . . . a ribbon, a second LDC, my trusty Green Bullet . . . but they don't see a lot of use. It's also nice to have a kick mic if you are recording drums, I don't have one at the moment though.

But yeah, buy three or four mics, an interface, and get on with it . . . I maintain the best money spent is on instruments and room, in that order. If you have a good player on a good instrument in a good room, it's actually difficult to make a bad recording. At that point, you have to actively screw up something.
 
Some wonderful solid advice here. "Thats the way we do it on the M TV. Money ain't for nothing an your chicks for free"
 
I also have a classically trained coloratura soprano wife, whose hearing is a bit higher than mine. Digital bothers her more than anyone else in our household.

My wife's only a mezzo-soprano, but she sure as heck can't tune out crying babies the way I can. Damaged hearing + being male=bliss ;)
 
Well, Gigastudio definitely won't run on a Porta!

I agree, it is not necessary to have a ton of gear. I also always record bass and electric guitar direct. But mainly I like to record a lot of acoustic instruments, so I do need microphones.

You may wish to check out the Taylor direct. Its easier than fussin with mics and sounds just as good if not better.

Bob
 
...and a good dynamic. And it so happens that I had that, at least until I sold my M88 (my favorite among the SM7/MD421 crowd--never tried the RE20).
I definitely *don't* want to turn this into the microphone forum (Yikes! :eek:), but just a couple of small things...

It's funny, because I have never tried the M88. I'll have to see if my local guy rents that one and try it out.
I have a few others . . . a ribbon, a second LDC, my trusty Green Bullet . . . but they don't see a lot of use.
Just curious, which ribbon and why it stays in the locker so much?

G.
 
C'mon Beck, my man, let's be honest here. That is *exactly* what you spend 90% of your time on this BBS doing. I'm not trying to claim that in and of itself is a bad thing; I've come to you for advice in the past because I respect your knowledge and experinece in things analog, and you have been very helpful, and I have been very appreciative.
G.

Glen, thanks for that last part, but really, what good does it do for me to respond if you keep taking my statements out of context and putting words in my mouth? Some of your points are appreciated, but others having to do with my comments on soundstage and digital I haven’t even addressed and have said nothing about interleave, because it would only interLEAVE most other members behind.

I’ve made it very clear that I place more importance on human perception... my own experience and the testomnony of others I’ve taked with about this going back to about 1989. Speaking of which, I’m a member of the AES, so you can add me to the list of members you know. :) If you had the benefit of the AES Journal all these years as I have you would understand that very little is set in stone and equally qualified people disagree.

when it comes to sound, as humans perceive it, Theorems and formulas can’t explain away what people hear. Maybe the idea of the narrowed soundstage is ludicrous if you don’t spend a lot of time in front of sound systems able to A/B analog and digital.

I spend 95% of my time on the forums answering questions regarding specific models and problems in all things recording… often with not so much as a thank you when I solve the problem. That only leaves 5% of my time for analog proselytizing. And even some of that is taken up just goofing around with my compadres on the forum. ;)

I spend most of my time in the analog section because that’s what I enjoy talking about. It’s a welcome relief from my day job as a computer consultant. I live in a digital world; I’m surrounded by digital tools, in and out of the studio, but for the most part there is no excitement there. It’s easy; I’ve mastered it, I know when and where to use it, but it’s unispiring to me. Thus you won’t find any posts from me in the Pro Tools section. A guy only has so much time. We have to choose a forum or two for most of our interaction, unless you want to live here.

No analog/digital controversy comes up unless someone else starts one. By me simply proposing an analog solution among other ideas is not starting an argument, unless the participants are all 13 years old. The mean-spirited replies by other members that often follow are the beginning point of the argument.

I’ve responded outside the analog forum to titles like “Why Analog?” “What Reel-to-Reel?” “Analog or Digital?” “How to Warm up my Sound.” All I have to do is mention analog tape, even in a thread that asks about tape and the goon squad invariably comes out of the woodwork. Many are misguided groupies that have learned everything they know on these product-oriented forums from their “Heroes”, but some are representatives from music manufacturing and music outlets conducting guerilla marketing. This is all too common, and is a dirty little secret of its own (speaking of). Marketing reps have a strong presence on most web forums and they often start the discussions that others unwittingly become embroiled in.

It takes two to tango, as they say. The pissing matches over digital/analog just get more attention as they drag on, but again my 3000+ posts include mostly helping, joking, talking about the weather, etc like everyone else. They are often long and involved with photos and descriptions, walking members through complex repairs. Or just having fun and being silly.

We've had a regular stream of trolls coming into the analog forum over the years just to poke fun at “The old guys” only to have their asses handed to them by me in a doggie bag. I don’t start those pissing matches, but being Scottish, I won’t be backing down from them either. In fact, we had such a troll problem that Dragon has banned some members from the analog forum, and others banned from the bbs altogether… IMO, a long needed house cleaning.

I’ll take your word for it about your dick… no pictures please. Besides, it’s what, about 5 degrees where you are now? And with a wind chill it’s going to look much smaller if you want the benefit of outdoor natural lighting for best effect... not to mention the risk of frostbite. Lets wait until spring to whip these big boys out, ‘k? :D

I really can’t take this too seriously right now… maybe tomorrow. So for now, here's me not taking myself too seriously... enjoy:

https://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?p=2572298&#post2572298
 
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C'mon Beck, my man, let's be honest here. That is *exactly* what you spend 90% of your time on this BBS doing. I'm not trying to claim that in and of itself is a bad thing; I've come to you for advice in the past because I respect your knowledge and experinece in things analog, and you have been very helpful, and I have been very appreciative.

But whether you realize it of not - and I suspect that inside you do - you do present yourself to others as one who is on the front line of preaching the analog gospel with the desire and goal to see it regain it's place as unquestioned king of the mountain. I have only rarely seen you on this BBS outside of the analog forum, and those times that you are (like now) it's been strictly to either advocate analog, bash digital, or both.Except those with equal fervor on the other side if the analog/digital religious war as well.

And I don't appreciate you lumping me in with the mis- or poorly-informed zealots on either side of that idiotic war. I am on record several times over as saying neither one is intrinsically "better" overall than the other, and for either side to claim so is just silly.

I'm tired of Evangelical Republicans branding me as a liberal Democrat at the same time that San Francisco Democrats brand me as too conservative for my own good, let alone the common good, and I'm not going to accept you lumping me in with the extremists in the "digital revolution" just because I recognize that the Emperor called Analog isn't wearing quite as many layers of clothes as you and your friends would like me to believe. I thought the "if your not with us, your against us" mentality died with Bushes credibility a few years ago.I agree with that. The Internet is filled with self-perpetuating myths and wikialities on the digital side. The same is true of analog. Mythology and religious fervor play no favorites on this issue.I don't want to turn this into a dick waving contest, beck, but I also have been at this since 1979, working both the analog and digital sides on the amateur and pro levels in audio, video and product development. Add to that honors degrees in computer science with minors in information science and physics, with a couple of semesters of electronics engineering thrown in for good measure.

We've both been around the block more than a few times, so let's stop waving our dicks at each other, and try and keep the debate on topic, shall we?Ummm, now that you have seen that your dick is no bigger than mine, you might want to reconsider that.

30 (well, OK, 29) years ago, when I built my first analog home studio (with homebrew digital control, though that had nothing to do with the sound itself), my day job was in sales and marketing of things audio and video. I left sales and marketing within 3 years and vowed never to return because I hate the total bullshit surrounding those fields. If you strayed out of the analog forum once in a while you'd know my utter disdain for marketing tactics and their total raping of the truth, for once again I am on record on these forums more times than I can count fighting against such bullshit. The whole studio in a box promise that you can buy this software tonight and sound like a rock star tomorrow expectation that are set nowdays are a big part of the problem for which this thread was originally started.Well, so far in this thread you have piled up the uninformed bullshit deeper than a 2" tape. To wit:

- that the physical interleave format of digital WAV and CDA files somehow corrupts the original stereo image encoded into that file. False. I have explained this is NO UNCERTAIN TERMS earlier in this thread; there is no way in this universe that the structure of the file could possibly have anything whatsoever to do with that. If you spent some four years as an engineer in audio software product development actually diving inside of the file formats and pulling out their guts the way that I have, you might understand with the certainty that I have.

- that the Nyquist theorum is all about minimum sample rate to avoid aliasing. False. Nyquist only peripherally even had audio in mind when he developed his theorum, and aliasing was little more than a complication or sidebar to be addressed and answered by the theorum. The whole purpose of Nyquist had to do with information theory in general and the ability to communicate analog information digitally. The Nyquist frequency is best definied as the minimum sample rate frequency required to be able to losslessly reconstruct an analog signal of limited bandwidth from the digital samples. Whether this was/is applied to audio, television signal transmission, telephoninc facimilie transmisison, digital multiplexing, or any other specific form of communication is simply use of the theorum after the fact in actual application, and not the one vertical application that Nyquist was specifically concerned with when he designed his theorum. And the idea of any aliasing issues is just one factor to be considered that the Theorum had to handle properly in order to work, not the main thesis or target of the theorum.

There are maybe 50 people on the entire Internet who honestly claim to know exactly the Nyquist Theorum in and out (I do not claim to be one of them). Of those 50, 40 are either erroneous or lying. But of those 40, 100% try to make it out as being much simpler than it actually is.

- That digital conversion, in and of itself, causes an unnatural corruption of the stereophonic field any worse than analog does. Even more so, that this is factual "common knowledge" amongest any engineer with any experience. I gotta tell ya, Beck, in all my years working in both analog and digital (yes I work and have worked both sides of the fence also), the only place I have ever heard that at all is amongst the more zealous of the analophiles on the Internet. I have worked with broadcast engineers and lifelong members of the AES, people who have analog coursing through teir veins, but who are realists all the same, who when they hear stuff like that just shudder and shake their heads in disgust.

Stereophony is encoded in the method of capture and in the playback setup. The only way outside of that the field image can be fucked with is by playing with delays and phase relationships between the two channels. Even then, the actions necessary to artifically collapse the field would have to be specific to that collapse effect; i.e. the delays and phase interrelations would have to be of a nature where they specifically pushed the field inward.

To say that by it's inherent nature, that the digital encoding process itself can and regularly does do that is ludicrous. If, IF such an effect were happening, it would have to be almost entirely attributable to some other factor than the theoretical process itself. It most CERTAINLY has zero to do with digital stereo storage formats as you offered earlier.

I alread went in some detail on other possible influence that acn fuck with the stereo image in digital, but all of those are attributable to bad mechanical implementation, not to the digital process istelf, and are all correctable. But here's another couple of posibilities to consider (I'm not saying they are true, necessarily, but they are potential variables to consider):

- The percentage of engineeers/CRs using nearfield monitoring exclusively vs. those that use partial or complete use of room-address (far-field) loudspeakers is greater in the digital realm than in the analog realm. Even with diffusion and absorption acoutics, CRs are not anechoic chambers, they do play a part in the overall imaging. The use of far field monitoring does allow the image to "mature" better than nearfields do. "Old school" engineers in "old school" CRs are mre apt to be exposed to this than those running strictly a PT rig on nearfields.

- As I demonstrated earlier in the thread, there is nothing "natural" about a stereophonic image to begin with, regardless of whether it's recorded with analog, digital or smoke signal. Any perceived "wider" image in analog is not relly going to be any closer to the truth than digital will. You will most likely repond to that by saying something along the lines of, "but it DOES sound better". Which leads right into th next point...No more or less than you are ignoring the fact that I too am "bi" (;)), and yet I play no favorites. I use the best tool for the job, and I don't find analog to always be the best tool or even the best sound. For example:

- Tell me to produce Yo Yo Ma, and I'll definitely want to lean analog.
- Tell me to produce Moby, and I'll definitely want to lean digital.
- Tell me to produce James Brown and I won't give a shit which bottle I use to catch the lightning, as long as it has a cap on it :).

What I notice most is that you admit that you "prefer analog". And there's nothing wrong with that. I don't prefer either, or maybe better, my preference are context-based, not absolute. I see nothing wrong with that either. That doesn't make either one of us right or wrong. That just demonstrates a bias difference (and not the same one you accuse me of, either.)Don't lump me in with them. I've been analog since the days of the Tascam 144, the TEAC A3340 and the Pioneer RT1020L. I also have experience using Otari, Sony, Studer and Studer/Revox (yes, the days of both names on one machine) analog open reel machines in formats from mono to 16 track. I've more than tasted the analog koolaid, and I quite like it. Just don't ask me to put arsenic in that koolaid and drink it along with you, any more than you would expect me to do the same with the digital flavored koolaid. Do you still believe after this post - if you have made it this far ;) :D - that what I am saying to you and what you are hearing from me are the same thing?Yeah, I know exactly who you probably heard it from, too. Forums are a great place to make inadvertant enemies of people who can't stand the heat of debate. I don't have time to worry about them, life is too short.

What I find facinating, beck, is that you accuse me of the very behavior you are exhibiting. You were tossing heat back and forth with terra mortim long before you got into it with me (BTW, terra is one of those that got pissed at me within two days of his joining the board, and I have to my knowledge never recovered :o. What can I say, ya can't make everyone happy all the time.)

We both claim to be fighting off the myth dragons, the problem is, we have differing views of just who the dragon is. You see digital as the dragon, ad I see zealotry and disinformation one way or the other as being the dragon.This I don't get. This thread had and has, except for your contributions, nothing to do with analog vs. digital. It had/has everything to do with expectations of home recording. Even all-digital pro productions on average are of higher quality than amateur recordings. NOTE I said "on average"; there are always exceptions. Nevertheless, any analog vs. digital debate is low on any list of reasons for an expectations let down regarding this topic. But as to how it's just about all you ever talk about, God forbid those that are not with you, fore they therefore must be against you.

G.

yup! What he said!
 
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