
Dr ZEE
Anti-Pro Circles Insider
Beck said:At least everyone is rolling something.![]()
I am rolling ma'balls at the moment...

/Elvis forever!

Beck said:At least everyone is rolling something.![]()
Beck said:Paul sing his part into a glass jar and quickly capping it. They learned this technique from watching cartoons form the 1940’s.
Beck said:The reason the fourth track was never used is that the real (but dead) Paul appeared to the new Paul in a dream and told him if he used his track the Maharishi would melt his brain with his Jedi powers, and that something called digital would one day be used for recording anyway.
Thus the new Paul was afraid to have his own track. So he shared a track with John. However, Yoko protested (you know Yoko). They solved the whole issue by having the new Paul sing his part into a glass jar and quickly capping it. They learned this technique from watching cartoons form the 1940’s.
At record time they opened the jar and released the new Paul’s voice, basically spinning it in on track #1 with John. It was difficult because you had to get the timing just right. Yoko was fine with it because John was able to have the personal space that she said he deserved. It was harder than it looked in the old days. Few people know what was going on behind the scenes.![]()
Beck said:Your most recent post sounds like someone playing the role of his stereotype analog fan.
Ok, 'fess up! Whose alter ego are you?
The researchers also looked at childhood impersonation - pretending to be an imaginary character - and found it to be almost universal. Virtually all preschoolers pretended to be an animal or another person and 95 percent of the school-age children engaged in impersonation. The researchers did not look at impersonation in the same detail as they did imaginary companions, and were surprised that so many school-age children continued to engage in the activity. One tantalizing finding was that school-age children who did little or no impersonation scored low on emotional understanding of other people, according to Carlson.
Beck said:The reason the fourth track was never used is that the real (but dead) Paul appeared to the new Paul in a dream and told him if he used his track the Maharishi would melt his brain with his Jedi powers, and that something called digital would one day be used for recording anyway.
Thus the new Paul was afraid to have his own track. So he shared a track with John. However, Yoko protested (you know Yoko). They solved the whole issue by having the new Paul sing his part into a glass jar and quickly capping it. They learned this technique from watching cartoons form the 1940’s.
At record time they opened the jar and released the new Paul’s voice, basically spinning it in on track #1 with John. It was difficult because you had to get the timing just right. Yoko was fine with it because John was able to have the personal space that she said he deserved. It was harder than it looked in the old days. Few people know what was going on behind the scenes.![]()
evm1024 said:I was once demoing some audio processing to my wife (now my ex) in A/B Processing in, processing out. She could not hear the difference at all and of course told me that it was in my imagination. To me the difference was huge and in a moment of insight I came up with something else for her to compare.
She "thought she could hear something but was not sure. What was this second test?
Sterio, mono.
Blackdog.sn said:This is completely true in that most people (untrained) cannot hear subtle difference consciously. This also applies to live music when a musician would cringe over his/her mistake, but the mistake is unnoticed by the audience.
Maybe a difference would come up when one unconciously keeps putting in the analog or digitally produced CD.
Dr ZEE said:well, who ever Quantagee may be in reality... it's all okey, 'cos at the end it helps him/her to understand entities outside of him/her-self.![]()
Beck said:I'm more concerned about the entities inside him/her-self.
"My name is Legion: for we are many."![]()
Dr ZEE said:p.s. what happened to TSR-8? Did you trade it off to become a King?![]()
Lotus said:....considering that, true to "moores law", computer technology has been doubling in power every 18 months since its humble beginnings (and continues to do so), do any here feel that maybe digital technology will be able to reproduce ANYTHING in terms of sound in the not too distant future??
I for one think that digital technology is still just a baby and we havent seen anything yet....just wait another 10-15 years (maybe sooner) and there will be NO difference between the sonic capabilities of analog and digital....digital seems to be a dirty word in some circles right now and true enough there are many problems and have been since the beginning but my feeling is that digital is at the beginning of a very long journey whereas analog has gone as far as it can go....my point being is that digital technology in general is totally open-ended and limited ONLY by present processing power which is increasing at a very fast pace....![]()
Lotus said:....considering that, true to "moores law", computer technology has been doubling in power every 18 months since its humble beginnings (and continues to do so), do any here feel that maybe digital technology will be able to reproduce ANYTHING in terms of sound in the not too distant future??
I for one think that digital technology is still just a baby and we havent seen anything yet....just wait another 10-15 years (maybe sooner) and there will be NO difference between the sonic capabilities of analog and digital....digital seems to be a dirty word in some circles right now and true enough there are many problems and have been since the beginning but my feeling is that digital is at the beginning of a very long journey whereas analog has gone as far as it can go....my point being is that digital technology in general is totally open-ended and limited ONLY by present processing power which is increasing at a very fast pace....![]()
Dr ZEE said:Do you want to have 100 guitar amps in your little digital modeling box? I guess so. So be it.
I don't want nor need nor care about having 100 amps. I only need ONE amp which I know and love and which speeks back to me when I pick the string. My amp is like my body. We sing together. We both have some sort of nerve between us. We are connected in a sense.
Nonsense?
evm1024 said:What I take away from this is that 24/192 digital audio is getting real close to analog. The key thing here is to remember that analog is a continious recording process where digital is a sampled process. So in a discrete sampled process the depths and rates need to be greater than the resolution of "the listener". And 24/192 is getting close.
snow lizard said:I think this makes far more sense than trying to tell people that analog tape machines grow on trees. (They don't, you know.)