
Chris Shaeffer
Peavey ROCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If you've been around for a little while you may have noted that I am one of relatively few people who have nice things to say about T-RackS.
Well...
Last weekend I was visiting a friend who owns a small studio and I brought a mix that I had leveled with T-RackS and the original Pro Tools sessions (actually a manual transfer from Cubase SX).
We listened to the mix first. After listening for a few moments he got a strange look on his face and hit the mono button. The meticulously recorded stereo acoustic guitar nearly vanished from the mix. "You've got phase issues." he said.
Well, I've read Harvey's mic thread forward and backwards and I know that my X/Y micing was not to blame for the phase cancellation, but it was still there. The mix sounded like doggy doo in mono.
We loaded in the PT sesssion and there were indeed no problems- the tune sounded the same summed to mono. He asked me "Did you use any analog modelers or stereo enhancers?"
Bingo! I had used the T-RackS gain stage for its fat sound, just a touch of its compresssor to bring down the spikes and...
...its stereo expander. That must have been where the phase crap had come in. How silly. That cans one of my favorite features of the program.
He shrugged and said on most systems in wouldn't matter all that much- but it would nail you on things like MP3's and internet distibution and playback on cheap systems. It sent up a red flag for me because T-RackS is primarily aimed at home users who are likely to do just that- post MP3's and such.
So I recant most of my praise for the program. I still think its a fun tool for use at home, but probably not worth the expense when it comes down to it. Definately not the tool to use if you want to master your music for sale.
Too bad. I really do like the sound it has. Its no good, though, if it only sounds good on some systems. That runs exactly counter to the whole point of mastering.
Take care,
Chris
Well...
Last weekend I was visiting a friend who owns a small studio and I brought a mix that I had leveled with T-RackS and the original Pro Tools sessions (actually a manual transfer from Cubase SX).
We listened to the mix first. After listening for a few moments he got a strange look on his face and hit the mono button. The meticulously recorded stereo acoustic guitar nearly vanished from the mix. "You've got phase issues." he said.
Well, I've read Harvey's mic thread forward and backwards and I know that my X/Y micing was not to blame for the phase cancellation, but it was still there. The mix sounded like doggy doo in mono.
We loaded in the PT sesssion and there were indeed no problems- the tune sounded the same summed to mono. He asked me "Did you use any analog modelers or stereo enhancers?"
Bingo! I had used the T-RackS gain stage for its fat sound, just a touch of its compresssor to bring down the spikes and...
...its stereo expander. That must have been where the phase crap had come in. How silly. That cans one of my favorite features of the program.
He shrugged and said on most systems in wouldn't matter all that much- but it would nail you on things like MP3's and internet distibution and playback on cheap systems. It sent up a red flag for me because T-RackS is primarily aimed at home users who are likely to do just that- post MP3's and such.
So I recant most of my praise for the program. I still think its a fun tool for use at home, but probably not worth the expense when it comes down to it. Definately not the tool to use if you want to master your music for sale.
Too bad. I really do like the sound it has. Its no good, though, if it only sounds good on some systems. That runs exactly counter to the whole point of mastering.
Take care,
Chris