Zoom H6
George Graves wrote:
Your comments reminded me of a guy I used to know. I was recording a
well known, and well respected symphony orchestra with a world-renown
conductor then. This guy (let's call him Bob) used to come back stage
and watch me hang microphones, set up equipment, align and bias my
(then) Otari 2-track/15ips MX-5050s, etc. while I was recording, he
would sit next to me back-stage and write down everything I did! He'd
make little drawings of all the switch and fader positions on my
mixing console, ask me about things like the distance of my mikes
from the stage, from the conductor, from the orchestra, etc. I
wondered why. He didn't have the same TAPCO mixer I had, he didn't
use Sony C-37p or C-500 microphones like I did. So, I wondered at the
purpose of it all.
Now, Bob was eat-up with recording. It was his main hobby. He even
bought a panel van to carry all of his gear and he recorded
constantly. Anyway, after a number of years of recording this
symphony, my REAL job started to require me to travel a lot and I
could no longer count on being in town for the symphony performances.
Bob begged me to recommend him to replace me. He had the gear and the
enthusiasm, so I suggested to the symphony management that they hire
him.
Occasionally, when I was in town, I would drop by the concert hall
and hang-out with Bob. He used the exact-same microphone
configurations that I used, except he used Neumann U-87s instead of
Sony C-37Ps as his principle microphone pair and he had a Yamaha
mixer, instead of a TAPCO. All fine and good. Then I noticed his
pan-pot positions for the Neumanns. They were at 10:30 and 1:30
positions. Why? I asked him. His answer was that with the mikes
panned fully left and right he got a "hole-in-the-middle". I couldn't
imagine why this would be so until he invited me to his house. His
speakers were located in the corners of his living room across the
wide dimension of the room! They must have been 17 feet apart. He
gave me a dub of one of the recordings and on my stereo, where the
speakers were about 7 feel apart, there was essentially dead mono.
After getting to know Bob a bit better, I realized that he had no
"feel" for what he was doing. He copied what others did in similar
situations, but he didn't understand the basics of recording and
simply could not visualize microphone pickup patterns and he had no
sense of how to properly use his microphones.
In other words, he had the experience (he recorded a lot), the
equipment, and the enthusiasm. What he lacked was TALENT and
therefore couldn't grasp what it was he was doing on almost any
level. He couldn't understand, for instance, that pan-potting a
stereo pair of mikes to fill-in the "hole-in-the-middle" of his
playback speakers, ruined the recording for everybody. Talent is
REQUIRED to be a successful recordist. Having the enthusiasm is
wonderful, and all, but it's simply not enough. If you don't have the
basic understanding of your tools and how to apply them, you'll never
get anywhere.
I have a friend who used to do video transfers of 8mm film to videotape. He
had some fairly good equipment in his little film chain, stuff that was
meant for that purpose, but his results were terrible. I had him do one of
mine one time, and it was so bad I decided to do it myself by projecting
onto a white screen and shooting it with a camera. Much better.
So I went over to his place and had him set up a session and show me what he
was doing. You guessed it, the monitor was not even attempted to be
calibrated, and he was making adjustments to color and brighness and
contrast based on this horrid picture. I told him about it, but he just blew
it off. And people were constantly sending him work, I guess because they
didn't know what was possible either.
Gary
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