M
Mistral
RyosaMusic
Deep........
peopleperson said:Whatever works, works.
Geesh.
peopleperson said:Whatever works, works.
Geesh.
Good point, but one doesn't have to know how to make pasta noodles from scratch to make one mean Linguine PomodoroSouthSIDE Glen said:Massive Master John hit it out of the park when he said that presets help keep one from actually learning how the device works and in turn saps one of opportunities being able to train their ears.
You're right, they don't. But I think that's a faulty and misleading analogy, because there's nothing that says that the pasta provided by the presets is any good to begin with. One could pick a "pasta" preset and have mueslix come out the other end.noisewreck said:Good point, but one doesn't have to know how to make pasta noodles from scratch to make one mean Linguine Pomodoro![]()
Yep, there is... they're called earsSouthSIDE Glen said:...there's nothing that says that the ... provided presets [are] any good to begin with.
Thats basically what he said he is doing, starting with pre sets then tweakingmx_mx said:How does a preset know what your mix needs? There must be a million combinations of eq, etc, so how often are 2 mixes ever going to be the same? I can see the point of using them as a starting place, and then tweaking from there, but you can't really expect to set a preset and leave it at that, can you?
Honest question here, not meaning to sound derrogatory, just trying to be honest: Do you really believe that 90% of the folks who regularly use presets have reliable ears? More of an exploration of this in a moment...noisewreck said:Yep, there is... they're called ears![]()
It's not a question of having to learn "the hard way", it's a question of having to learn, period. There is nothing "hard" about learning to use an EQ or a compressor properly and to it's maximum effect. It's not calculus. It's easy.noisewreck said:the old guard mentality, the ones that had to learn the hard way, didn't have the luxury of automatic transmission (ugh... I hate those with a passion... the automatic transmissions that is)... didn't have the luxury of instant recall, and all those niceties, somehow have this thing ingrained in them that unless you use an abacus, you're not really learning the finer points of calculus![]()
Because if you don't pay attention to just what settings the preset represents and what they actually mean, you'll never know where you started and never learn why the tweaks were needed. If you have no idea what "Guitar presence 2" actually means and why, you'll never know how to actually use a compressor to it's best effect.noisewreck said:So, in the end, if a preset works, GREAT! If it doesn't, well then you adjust the said signal processor to your liking (and thus learn it in the process). I just don't see why one is mutually exclusive of the other.
I get your point completely, but you're thinking backwards. I'd say that 90% of the people doing music (pro and amature alike) don't have reliable ears regardless whether they use presets or not. By the same token, the other 10% of the people that use presets, actually study them in great detail, and reverse engineer a lot of them. This is a great way to learn!SouthSIDE Glen said:Honest question here, not meaning to sound derrogatory, just trying to be honest: Do you really believe that 90% of the folks who regularly use presets have reliable ears?
A good friend of mine, an industrial manufacturing engineer would disagree. He has no problem making difficult (for you and I) calculations by hand, or in his head, but can't tell the difference between triangle and square waves... well that's not entirely true... he CAN tell the difference and can construct the formulae for generating them, but can't tell the difference in soundSouthSIDE Glen said:It's not a question of having to learn "the hard way", it's a question of having to learn, period. There is nothing "hard" about learning to use an EQ or a compressor properly and to it's maximum effect. It's not calculus. It's easy.
Sounds like a no-brainer to meSouthSIDE Glen said:All it takes is training one's ears to listen inside the sound and the music and not just the surface of the song... ...The first part - having the "ears" - should be the automatic #1 given for anybody to have before even laying their paws on a project studio level signal processor...
SouthSIDE Glen said:On the other hand, it's because folks regularly put the cart before the horse - getting the gear before they are ready to use it - that they keep showing up in these forums asking inane questions...
SouthSIDE Glen said:Because if you don't pay attention to just what settings the preset represents and what they actually mean, you'll never know where you started and never learn why the tweaks were needed. If you have no idea what "Guitar presence 2" actually means and why, you'll never know how to actually use a compressor to it's best effect.
Indeed. However as I gave you the scenario where our theoretical user has already auditioned certain presets and has made note of them and knows what to expect, presets are great time savers.SouthSIDE Glen said:The Catch 22 of that is once a person's ears and knowledge are at that level (and remember, if done properly, that level can be attained in a very short period of time), they then will be of a level of understanding and operation where that preset is now superfluous and unnecessary. They will recoginize that they can more often than not, do better than the preset and do it without having to find the preset first.
Yeah, you're right, after your last post I agree that we are actually closer than seemed at first blush. That happens soooo often in these forums; it's great on occasions like these where we acually recognize that fact after talkingthings out and don't instead let the discussion degrade into hollering and insults back and forthnoisewreck said:In the end you and I agree a lot more than disagree... the rest is just nitpicking![]()
Here we absolutely agree.noisewreck said:I get your point completely, but you're thinking backwards. I'd say that 90% of the people doing music (pro and amature alike) don't have reliable ears regardless whether they use presets or not.
While I agree that reverse engineering presets would be very instructional, I must not be seeing the same 10% that you do. The ones that I see the most are of the ilk where if you took teir presets away from them they'd be literally taking pot shots in the dark with setting the manual controls.noisewreck said:By the same token, the other 10% of the people that use presets, actually study them in great detail, and reverse engineer a lot of them. This is a great way to learn!
And I quite frankly got a D in Calculus in college (having the class at 8am didn't helpnoisewreck said:A good friend of mine, an industrial manufacturing engineer would disagree. He has no problem making difficult (for you and I) calculations by hand, or in his head, but can't tell the difference between triangle and square waves... well that's not entirely true... he CAN tell the difference and can construct the formulae for generating them, but can't tell the difference in sound![]()
Again, 100% agreement there.noisewreck said:Which comes back to your point of actually having the ears to be able to tell. My contention is, if you're able to tell by ear, then it doesn't matter how you got the sound you got. In fact, if you have the ear to tell you that something actually NEEDS a compressor, you're already 50% there. If you can also tell WHICH compressor in your arsenal that particular something needs, you're 90% there.
Perhaps I was a bit strong when I said inane, and you're right, asking questions is key and a great idea overall, no matter how "inane" they may sound. My only point there was that if one had the ears, 80% of the questions posed would answer themselves. You're right, that some answers are not intuitive; your boost vs. cut is an excellent example of that. But I think of the total number of questions asked in such a vein, more often than not the answer that most of us hold back from actually giving is, "Whatever your ears tell you. And if your ears aren't refined enough to give you the right answer, there's not much else we can do for you."noisewreck said:Well, in order to learn, one has to use the gear and ask inane questions
...
if one doesn't ask inane questions like that, one might never get people to tell them "well, actually if you cut around such and such frequency rather than boost at the other frequency, you'll get your desired results in a more musical, transparent manner". Those kinds of things for example are not immediately apparent, no matter how good an ear you have.
As to the first question, as I answered earlier, that has been my observation. There is a reverse observation that I feel supports this too. Anybody who asks, "What compression ratio should I use for vocals?" or, "How should I EQ my kick to make the sound fatter?" is really asking for a preset answer. Maybe not a physical preset that actually exists on their box, but they are asking for a set, formulaic answer. They are asking for a custom preset. If they really knew how things worked they'd know that formulaic answers to those kinds of questions are about as useful as breast implants on a bull. They'd knwo that choosing those as starting points to "reverse engineer" makes things no more easier than picking any other arbitrary starting value and tweaking from there. The very fact that they are asking for a preset indicates that they are not interested in reverse engineering it, They are looking for an instant and gratuitous solution to their problem so they can move on to the next one.noisewreck said:But why are you assuming that a person using a preset doesn't pay attention? OK, I get your 90%/10% thing above, but I still believe that presets have nothing to do with it. Presets don't make people lazy. People are lazy by nature in general.
Maybe it's just how I work, but I honestly just don't see as how when one suspects from listening to a track and watching the meters, for example, that it needs some peak taming of about 3:1 at a threshold just a few dBs of negative FS, and that I have to set the attack fairly fast because it's a rapid transient, that it's faster to scroll through a bunch of presets (either in software or on a hardware dial), remember just which one does what, pick which one comes the closest to what I need, adjustthat to what i really thought it needed, and then tweak from there than it is to simply dial in 3:1 with threshold of -6dB and a fast attack woth auto release, and do final tweaks from there. It just simply seems to me (and I've tried it) that going from the preset is actually a slower and more laborious of a process.noisewreck said:Indeed. However as I gave you the scenario where our theoretical user has already auditioned certain presets and has made note of them and knows what to expect, presets are great time savers.
noisewreck said:A good friend of mine, an industrial manufacturing engineer would disagree. He has no problem making difficult (for you and I) calculations by hand, or in his head, but can't tell the difference between triangle and square waves... well that's not entirely true... he CAN tell the difference and can construct the formulae for generating them, but can't tell the difference in sound![]()