
snow lizard
Dedicated Slacker
That Jp22 recording is nothing short of revolutionary. That's the most pissed off typewriter I've ever heard in my life!
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UB802 said:I could hear stuff like a kick drum hit that was maybe 18db louder than any other, and something like this was chewing up headroom on the mix. How would YOU suggest they deal with that kind of problem?
Mixerman said:This fact has enormous consequences to the brain. We are far too eager to trust our eyes before our ears.
snow lizard said:That Jp22 recording is nothing short of revolutionary. That's the most pissed off typewriter I've ever heard in my life!
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Ah, if only it was that simple.grn said:a lot of what is on this thread is completely useless, if you track your recordings correctly, all you'll need to do is adjust the volume.
mshilarious said:I also have to deal with impairment of both senses. I wear glasses, but they don't make those for ears![]()
bigwillz24 said:Uhmmmm.... they're called hearing aides.![]()
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mshilarious said:They don't work the same way. Hearing aids are only designed for speech recognition; they are hardly hi-fi. When you go to an audiologist with tinnitus, they basically tell you there is nothing they can doThey don't normally even test above 8kHz.
bigwillz24 said:Man it was a joke... Thanks for making me turn down my music though...
noisedude said:... wading through thread after thread duking it out over the best cheaper-than-Behringer mini-mixer and similar pointless gear conversations.![]()
mshilarious said:They don't work the same way. Hearing aids are only designed for speech recognition; they are hardly hi-fi. When you go to an audiologist with tinnitus, they basically tell you there is nothing they can doThey don't normally even test above 8kHz.
Ohmygod, the first rational post! Dude, that's simple and utter brilliance. If only we could find a way to bottle it & sell it to these jackasses!grn said:a lot of what is on this thread is completely useless, if you track your recordings correctly, all you'll need to do is adjust the volume.
So what you're suggesting Ed, is that Mixerman's input here is going to be too far advanced for "simple home-recordists" to grasp or to find useful? How kind of you to watch out for their "limited abilities" like that....UB802 said:Sorry dewd, you have missed what I am talking about fully. I am ain't gonna try spelling it out anymore. You can re-read and understand what seems evident to most others, or, you can continue to talk smack.
I can see you are going to have a very hard time relating to the average person on a home recording site. This IS NOT a place of tuned control rooms, stellar monitoring, and "engineers" experienced is prolonged critical listening. There is shit in a mix that many of these guys just won't hear with inferior rooms and monitors that would be obvious in a more controlled listening environment. Throw in the lack of experience in what they CAN hear and knowing how that will translate down the road, well, you can see that disaster can strike early on in the production.
Back in the 16 bit days, headroom meant everything! Sorry, but having a mix that with an average level of around -24dB just wasn't gonna cut it. Saving 24dB for peaks? Yeah right! Wasting that kind of level over a few errant kick drum kit, from a drummer that is mostly unskilled, that their poor monitoring couldn't faithfully reproduce just meant once that mix was "mastered", stuff they didn't expect to hear was going to become obvious.
But, whatever...........
YOU said it... I didn't........UB802 said:Those sound like your words there Brucey.
Blue Bear Sound said:YOU said it... I didn't........![]()
UB802 said:Sorry dewd, you have missed what I am talking about fully. I am ain't gonna try spelling it out anymore. You can re-read and understand what seems evident to most others, or, you can continue to talk smack.
I can see you are going to have a very hard time relating to the average person on a home recording site.
This IS NOT a place of tuned control rooms, stellar monitoring, and "engineers" experienced is prolonged critical listening. There is shit in a mix that many of these guys just won't hear with inferior rooms and monitors that would be obvious in a more controlled listening environment. Throw in the lack of experience in what they CAN hear and knowing how that will translate down the road, well, you can see that disaster can strike early on in the production.
Back in the 16 bit days, headroom meant everything! Sorry, but having a mix that with an average level of around -24dB just wasn't gonna cut it. Saving 24dB for peaks? Yeah right! Wasting that kind of level over a few errant kick drum kit, from a drummer that is mostly unskilled, that their poor monitoring couldn't faithfully reproduce just meant once that mix was "mastered", stuff they didn't expect to hear was going to become obvious.
But, whatever...........