Scott Gardner a écrit :
On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 19:36:50 GMT, MINe 109
wrote:
In article ,
(Scott Gardner) wrote:
On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 16:47:06 GMT, MINe 109
wrote:
You may have discovered for yourself that the trend in new masterings is
toward *less* dynamic range. The loudness wars continue.
What was the specific recording?
I've noticed it to some extent on all of the albums I've recorded so
far. They've all been recordings that were made in the mid 80's or
earlier. The ones where I've noticed it the most have been
Harry Belafonte - "at Carnegie Hall - The Complete Concert"
Joe Jackson - "Night and Day"
Jackson Browne - "The Pretender"
Those are all fairly well known. I'll fire up the turntable and get back
to you.
Thanks.
When I recorded those three, and played the songs back, I had to raise
the volume on my iPod from about 50% to about 75% to get to my desired
listening level. Similar increases were necessary when playing back
on the PC. Once I increased the volume, they sounded fine, but it got
me thinking about what I could do to fix it, since I was having to
constantly adjust volume between listening to my tracks I recorded
from CD and the ones I recorded from LP.
Since you said elsewhere that you are using a cheap turntable and
preamp, presumably to avoid new purchases, you probably won't want to
investigate the Really Nice Compressor to see if a high quality analog
compressor might help.
http://www.fmraudio.com/
Under $200.
I'm only recently getting into what could even be fairly
described as "mid-fi". I have a Rega Planar 3 in my main system, but
I didn't want to move it up into the computer room for the next six
months, so I'm using my older Pioneer direct-drive that I just put a
new cartridge on. The preamp is the "DeeJayPre, by Artcessories.
As low-end as this equipment is, I've actually been very happy
with the results I've gotten so far. I only posted here because of
the overall lack of volume of my recorded tracks, not any other
issues. It's probably because I'm listening to the end results
non-critically, in a compressed format, on an iPod.
This is important to remind us that the final use is a compressed format
on a iPod.
I also use SoundForge and I have a Technics instead a Pioneer but this
allow me to "resuscitate" very old venyls I have since the 70s.
Recently I have spent many hours to make a lifting to Fela and Ginger
Baker LP "Live!" which was in the top 10 of my studient parties. I let
you imagine the poor shape.
I cannot say that I have done a miracle nor that the result would be
decent for an audiophile but its now audible. :-)