M
MaxMix
New member
It's interesting you know . . being a "hi-fi" person I look at
the equipment, interconnects and other such like stuff and
wonder why it's all so different when the product is actually
recorded . .
For hi-fi . .
People spend thousands on special cables, stands, amplifiers
etc . . To try and extract the purest sound from the source
material they possibly can . . Keeping everything as neutral
as possible so as not to "colour (color)" the sound . .
For recording . .
It's all goes through all kinds of stuff, equalisation, interconnects,
effects . . The so called "hi-fi" syndrome goes completely "out
of the window" . . It's all tweeked to death to attempt to
get a "hi-fi" result! Crazy eh? . .
Maybe I'm missing a point somewhere, but somehow I can
see major conflict between the two scenarios?
One one hand we are trying to reproduce a pure and true
result . . On the other we are adjusting to attempt to give
a similar impression . . A true hi-fi person would shudder at
the though of inserting a "graphic equaliser" in the system! It
would simply degrade the sound!! A recording engineer would
do quite the reverse perhaps? . .
Interesting and food for thought . .
the equipment, interconnects and other such like stuff and
wonder why it's all so different when the product is actually
recorded . .
For hi-fi . .
People spend thousands on special cables, stands, amplifiers
etc . . To try and extract the purest sound from the source
material they possibly can . . Keeping everything as neutral
as possible so as not to "colour (color)" the sound . .
For recording . .
It's all goes through all kinds of stuff, equalisation, interconnects,
effects . . The so called "hi-fi" syndrome goes completely "out
of the window" . . It's all tweeked to death to attempt to
get a "hi-fi" result! Crazy eh? . .
Maybe I'm missing a point somewhere, but somehow I can
see major conflict between the two scenarios?
One one hand we are trying to reproduce a pure and true
result . . On the other we are adjusting to attempt to give
a similar impression . . A true hi-fi person would shudder at
the though of inserting a "graphic equaliser" in the system! It
would simply degrade the sound!! A recording engineer would
do quite the reverse perhaps? . .
Interesting and food for thought . .