K
kylen
New member
Yep - this is the deal. Captured live - the band plays in familiar and comfortable setting - not always for the convience of the recording guy. It happens - a great moment or performance is captured. Oops - what's that resonance? Voxengo Soniformer to the rescue - Yummy.leddy said:I'd like to chime in with my experience:
Let's not forget that not all recording is done in a controlled environment (studio). I record live jazz. Some rooms sound good, some do not. I am mixing a recording right now where there are some funny resonant frequencies happening in the upright bass due to being close to a corner. If you have a large boost at say, 90hz as a result, you may end up with certain notes that really jump out. Because of the bleed from the live recording situation, I can't use regular compression - I hate compression on cymbals and that is what bleeds in mostly. If I cut 90hz, the notes that don't jump out lose an important part of the sound.
The tool that absolutley makes chicken salad out of chicken poo in this case is Voxengo's Soniformer. I'm not sure how this would have been done 10 years ago. If someone knows a better way, fill me in (and please don't just tell me to move the bass away from the corner - I can't control how some nightclub designed the stage). Believe me, I would rather not use the MBC plug, but it's the only way I get good results so far in situations like this.
Folks probably wondered what the hell this new fangled tool was when in came upon the scene invented by Mr. Massenburg now we all take it for granted - it can still tear a mix to shreds unless you know how to drive it - the parametric EQ they call it! The Daddy of crossoverless band-pass type multibands (same as Soniformer)

. But based upon my experiences and observations, the points I'm bringing up about technique vs. gear (and I'm not saying just MBCs, I'm talking in general) are so obviously a major source of so many of the problems brought to this board, that this is a huge issue which needs to be discussed.
. (j/k. I'm sure you've been busy doing something far more productive
and the subjects just aren't listening...