
regebro
Insane Genious!
Haha. *cough* *snort*Teacher said:just listen, the reverbs tails are much longer i guess doubled

Haha. *cough* *snort*Teacher said:just listen, the reverbs tails are much longer i guess doubled
Reggie said:I think I'm kinda with that guy that said around 55-60 kHz woulda been an optimal sample rate if things could be changed from the beginning. In my opinion, there is no doubt that 96K sounds better than 44.1k recordings. But I don't think it is necessary to go all the way out to 88.1 or 96k to keep the better sound I perceive. 44.1 comes up just short, but 96 goes way too far and eats up too much processing/disk space. If they had made the CD format 60kHz from the beginning, maybe we wouldn't have people bitching about the "digital sound" anymore. Hindsight is awesome.
apl said:To answer the question, you should record at the same sampling frequency that your final product will be. If your gonna make audio CDs stick with 44.1 kHz.
robin watson said:You pipped me at the post on that point, SonicA. All this stuff about reverb tails being longer and affected EQ curves: doesn't this all imply that mixing at a different sampling rate is tantamount to mixing on innacurate monitors?
SonicAlbert said:I agree with this. I've recorded at different rates than the final product, and mixed at different rates than the final product. in the end, I've always been unhappy with what it sounded like after the sample rate was converted to the final sample rate.
By that I mean it not only sounded worse to my ears, but *different*. It's the different part that bothers me. I do think that the reverb tails sounded different, and also there seemed to be a different eq curve to the whole mix. If I had mixed those projects at those sample rates I would have definitely done things a bit differently.
So, based on my own experiences, I think it is a good idea to mix at the sample rate of the final product.
Or, mix analog and then simply record at the bit and sample rate of the final product. So in that scenario you would record the initial tracks at whatever high resolution you wanted, then mix analog and record both high resolution and 16/44.1 versions.