Oh I agree with ya.
It's gonna have to be about pride in ones work, not a arbitrary number.
Thank you!
I do feel that the fact that it spurs conversation is a good thing.
I do agree with that, but it doesn't require an artificial and arbitrary certification to do that. They could have spurred just as much conversation by starting up the TMU tagging program without any need for certification.
I don't see a certification program stopping anyone from doing anything either.
Unless or until someone who just doesn't truely understand the voaction decides to use TMUs numbers as the goal instead of actually letting their content guide them, and unless/until the TMU numbers become a
de facto standard.
These boards are filled with questions asking what numbers they should be using for anything from compression ratios to magic frequencies to digital recording levels to monitoring volumes. The answer almost alwyas is some detailed form of "it depends". The last thing this industry needs is yet another artificial set of numbers that folks think should be a recipe or a magic number instead of actually using both of their ears and both sides of their brains to make things sound as good as they can, and let the numbers just plain fall where they may.
perhaps if mastering engineers got a little more respect in regards to the finished product they would care a little more about what they put thier name on.
Honestly I don't think it's the engineers that are the problem - unless you're taling about the newer home recorders.
Virtually every mix engineer and mastering engineer I have ever talked to myself or read an interview with thinks the Volume Wars are idiotic, and they would much rather do things the right way. But almost every one of them also says that they are participating tn the Wars because that's what their clients in the form of the producers or artists are asking for.
Unfortunately, most of these engineers simply cannot afford to quit the project or turn down a job out of the altruism of protesting the Wars, and it would be unrealistic to ask them to.
Amongst the producers, from what I have seen so far, debate is already taking place, and the education is slowly starting to take hold. It's great that this will continue the debate amongst them, but couldn't that just as easily have been done without the idea of artificial certification?
Amongst the clients and the newb recorders, OTOH, the certification can easily be seen as an artificial target where things "should be", and then once again the engineers will be at their mercy. the only difference is that they will be at the mercy of an erroneous belief in a different bad idea than the one they are at the mercy of now.
FALKEN said:
If you don't like it, why don't you make you're OWN system??
Ok, you got it, babe. Watch for the Free Dynamics Initiative, coming soon. A set of tags for those of us that - to quote an earlier post - support the freedom of the client/engineer/producer to choose dynamic volume levels that they feel suit the content the best, with the intent to deliver to the listener the best sounding recording thay can, without bowing to the the competitive pressue or the desire to smash their stuff ito a pancake, and without the equal pressure or desire to follow someone else's personal idea of what the volume dynamics should be in order to get "certified".
The wording will be improved, but most will get the idea.
G.