
JimmyS1969
MOODerator
I like how you worded that.![]()
I like how you complimented the way I worded that.

I like how you worded that.![]()
It actually depends on the room. If it is a far mic in a tight room, it's not a problem. If it's a far mic that has a decent amount of decay, you are screwed if you are changing the arrangement of the song, or trying to copy/paste the one time he played the riff well from the middle of the phrase to the end, or something like that.Mmmmm....I guess that is possible....
....if the guy is editing only with visual cues from the graphics and not listening to the edits.![]()
It actually depends on the room. If it is a far mic in a tight room, it's not a problem. If it's a far mic that has a decent amount of decay, you are screwed if you are changing the arrangement of the song, or trying to copy/paste the one time he played the riff well from the middle of the phrase to the end, or something like that.
I run into a lot of stuff I can't do much about, simply because I mix other peoples stuff for a living. People send me what they have already done, so I don't have the chance to catch it during the record phase or bring them in to retrack anything. When you are largely doing your own stuff, you have more of a chance to make it right the first time or just redo it until you get it. By the time I get these tracks, I have to just deal with what they gave me and find a way to make it work. You wouldn't believe some of the tracks I get.
The trouble comes when you are editing a part together that doesn't naturally go together. Like flying a chorus that goes into a verse to replace the chorus that goes into the bridge, the decay over the first note of the bridge will be different than the decay going into it. Especially if you are changing the arrangement of the song and the parts never went into each other.I understoood Fairview to be talking about two mics...one close, one room...and about edits being easier to see.
Or was he saying something else....?
Sure, if you just visusally slice both tracks where the close mic tail ends, it will be too short for the room mic....but again, monitoring the edit will tell you where the right spot is.
The trouble comes when you are editing a part together that doesn't naturally go together.