C
chessrock
Banned
The old myth: "Digital recording is inherently a cold, sterile sounding recording medium."
The NEW myth: "The bad rap digital recording gets about being cold and sterile sounding is a myth."
The idea that myth number one is a myth . . . is in itself a myth all it's own.
Digital is an ACCURATE recording medium. It is BOTH warm AND cold at the same time. And it is neither. The fact that it imparts no warmth that isn't already present durning tracking or mixdown, pretty much equates to digital NOT being "warm." From yet another perspecive, it IS indeed cold and sterile COMPARED to the sound of quality, saturated analog tape, in most peoples' subjective opinion.
But being cold COMPARED to something else doesn't make it cold, right? Just because Florida doesn't usually get as hot as Southern California doesn't make IT cold. From what we have been discovering through our experiences, digital recording doesn't take warm-sounding inputs and "chill them" or make them less sterile than they were coming in.
Scientifically speaking, there is no such thing as cold. Cold does not exist, in theory. What does exist is "Lack of heat." Digital recording can be said to lack heat - or heat of it's own, to be more accurate. However, an exteme lack of heat can have a very real (and dangerous) presence, and drastic effects on the warmth of objects that come in contact with it. We indeed perceive it as a very real thing, just like we would perceive a lack of oxygen a real phenomenon. Certainly, digital doesn't have this type of "heat-lacking."
So what's the truth? The truth is digital recording is "room temperature." I expect all of you to write this down and post it on your refrigerators. You can even write a clever reminder: The contents of this frige are COLD. My digital recordings are not, unless I put them in here.
You can also post another reminder on your oven: "Place recordings in here for added warmth."
And on your microwave, you can post something like: "Place recordings here to unevenly heat the outside while leaving the inside cold."
On your blender, you can post: "Place recordings here and add ice cream, milk, and hershey's syrup to make a tasty shake."
The NEW myth: "The bad rap digital recording gets about being cold and sterile sounding is a myth."
The idea that myth number one is a myth . . . is in itself a myth all it's own.
Digital is an ACCURATE recording medium. It is BOTH warm AND cold at the same time. And it is neither. The fact that it imparts no warmth that isn't already present durning tracking or mixdown, pretty much equates to digital NOT being "warm." From yet another perspecive, it IS indeed cold and sterile COMPARED to the sound of quality, saturated analog tape, in most peoples' subjective opinion.
But being cold COMPARED to something else doesn't make it cold, right? Just because Florida doesn't usually get as hot as Southern California doesn't make IT cold. From what we have been discovering through our experiences, digital recording doesn't take warm-sounding inputs and "chill them" or make them less sterile than they were coming in.
Scientifically speaking, there is no such thing as cold. Cold does not exist, in theory. What does exist is "Lack of heat." Digital recording can be said to lack heat - or heat of it's own, to be more accurate. However, an exteme lack of heat can have a very real (and dangerous) presence, and drastic effects on the warmth of objects that come in contact with it. We indeed perceive it as a very real thing, just like we would perceive a lack of oxygen a real phenomenon. Certainly, digital doesn't have this type of "heat-lacking."
So what's the truth? The truth is digital recording is "room temperature." I expect all of you to write this down and post it on your refrigerators. You can even write a clever reminder: The contents of this frige are COLD. My digital recordings are not, unless I put them in here.

And on your microwave, you can post something like: "Place recordings here to unevenly heat the outside while leaving the inside cold."
On your blender, you can post: "Place recordings here and add ice cream, milk, and hershey's syrup to make a tasty shake."