Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#121
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ...
I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. 1. Locate concrete wall. 2. Bang head against it until profuse bleeding begins. 3. Stop and sigh in relief. I am reminded of a story about John Logie Baird, the Scottish TV pioneer who espoused spinning-disk technology. It is said that he one day walked into the BBC labs where the people were working on (what was then) high-definition, all-electronic television. It is said that he walked out in a state of shock. I hope the audio equivalent of this event occurs -- soon -- with Mr Eickmeier taking the place of Mr Baird. |
#122
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Scott Dorsey wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: One last general comment. The truest truism we can state about all of this recording and playback of live sounds is that you can't tell what your recordings sound like until they are played back. This sounds like a triviality, but what it means is, when I send George a recording or when he sends me one, we don't really know what the other will hear from it! It's kind of like Floyd Toole's circle of confusion. We make recordings that will sound good on our systems, then we make judgements about the recording based on that system and judgements about our systems based on our recordings. No, this isn't a truism at all. If it were, we'd all be out of a job. It's the job of the engineer to make a good prediction about what things will sound like coming out of the microphone before they even hit the tape machine. Yes, listening on reference monitors might make you change a few things, but using your ears and some smarts will be enough to make good predictions about the sound. Just because YOU can't do it yet doesn't mean it's not possible. Secondly, recordings made should translate well between reference systems and sound similar between reference systems, as long as those systems are more or less designed with the same set of rules. Yes, if you're using the 901 ****tifiers they will sound different than they do through a normal playback chain, but that's very much an outlier. Engineers doing pop and rock music will often use multiple degraded "check mix" monitoring system as well as the standardized monitors in order to tell what recordings will sound like with degraded playback, and _that_ is something that can be hard to tell even with a lot of experience. Still, all of these things that you keep citings as truisms and absolutes are actually just the result of your lack of experience and improper monitoring system. I hate to break it to you. If I am to be faulted because I have my own ideas about audio, then join the crowd because very few audio engineers agree about anything, much less recording or playback technology. We are all on our own, but I do indeed listen. No, you can be faulted because you really don't know what you're doing, you have no experience in a normal studio environment, and you are telling people who have worked thirty years in professional studios that they are doing their job wrong. --scott As is so often the case Scott nails it to the floor right through some fool's feet. Generally when it gets to this point it turns out the fool remains oblivious. He wasn't going anywhere before he got nailed down anyway. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#123
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Marc Wielage wrote:
On Tue, 1 Oct 2013 09:21:07 -0700, George Graves wrote (in article ): It might be because of his monitor speakers (Bose 901's !) and the way he has them configured. Your guess is as good as mine ------------------------------snip------------------------------ Say no more! A monitor's job is warning. In this case it doesn't work, because the "monitor" has a mouth full of mush. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#124
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
Well, that's almost an explanation! But seriously, does anyone know exactly how they measure microphones? Is it this convolution thing on a spark discharge, or do they take measurements all around like with a loudspeaker and get some sort of 3D plot? Or both? You seracdh so seriouysoy for information you may have been too busy to note this thing called "Google". Troll. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#125
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Trevor wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... Poor dumb Gary, thinking you can get a good digital recorder for $399. Probably thinks you can get a good car for under 30 thou, or DSLR for $900. Poor *******. Yep, being poor does place a limit on your desire for the best regardless of cost. :-( Of course being rich doesn't necessarily make you appreciate it though. And being poor or rich has no direct correlation with being smart or dumb. Trevor. A few years ago I walked into a horrible acoustical environment and heard really excellent SR. Barbara K and Richard Bowden were playing, so source quality was worthy. Mics were SM58's, and the board and speakers were all cheap Behringer kit. It sounded fabulous. Then I noted Chet Himes was the engineer. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#126
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#127
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 6:04:10 PM UTC-7, Scott Dorsey wrote:
George Graves wrote: Funny thing about imaging. It has to exist in the recording. Often, in mode= rn recordings, especially commercial pop/rock recordings it's not. It also = doesn't exist in multimiked/multi-channel classical recordings or in most c= ommercial jazz recordings. True stereo (the only way to get real image spec= ificity, image height and imaging front-to-back layering) just isn't done t= hat much, commercially And that, in short, is why people use things like the Bose 901s, which add artificial phase cues in there. Gotta say. I've NEVER been a fan of the 901s (or for that matter, any of Amar Bose' products). George Graves |
#128
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 9:53:08 PM UTC-7, hank alrich wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: 5. I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. My prototype speakers are designed along those lines ( a shaped radiation pattern designed around image modeling the typical live sound presentation) and the latest ones beat the Behringers and Linkwitz Orions in the Linkwitz Challenge at the AES. Long story shorter, you haven't heard my system so take your own advice and withhold judgement until you do. Okay, I get it. You're a troll. ****ing ridiculous crap you're spouting. Have at it. Actually Hank, he's NOT a troll. He's dead serious. George Graves |
#129
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 10:43:43 PM UTC-7, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
George Graves wrote: In article , "Peter Larsen" wrote: George Graves wrote: Funny thing about imaging. It has to exist in the recording. Often, in modern recordings, especially commercial pop/rock recordings it's not. It also doesn't exist in multimiked/multi-channel classical recordings or in most commercial jazz recordings. True stereo (the only way to get real image specificity, image height and imaging front-to-back layering) just isn't done that much, commercially Yes, height information! - it is probably an illusion, but it is when the image leaves the monofilament between the loudspeakers and happen above and outside them and you hear the room behind you that you got stereo right and then you sit and wonder what 5.1 is all about ![]() Of course the Carlson bins made it happen all the time ... Kind regards Peter Larsen To be honest, all stereo is an illusion. but I'm continually amazed at what an impressive illusion is possible with just a couple of good, well placed microphones. Image height is captured, One can close their eyes and pick out, in space, each instrument in the ensemble even when many instruments are playing together. One can hear that the brasses are behind the woodwinds, and the triangle "floats" over the left side of the orchestra, just like it does in the concert hall. Sure it's an illusion, but it can be a damned good one! No, image height is not "captured." Neither the ears nor the microphones have any mechanism to detect height. It is strictly a pinna effect wherein certain frequencies seem to sound above where they should be. At the live event you don't hear this because your eyes override the effect. On playback, it often sems like the horns are higher than the rest of the instruments. Then perhaps you can tell me why multimiked recordings of symphony orchestras NEVER exhibit that phenomenon, but true minimalist stereo recordings always do? George Graves |
#130
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wednesday, October 2, 2013 7:35:33 AM UTC-7, hank alrich wrote:
Trevor wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... Poor dumb Gary, thinking you can get a good digital recorder for $399. Probably thinks you can get a good car for under 30 thou, or DSLR for $900. Poor *******. Yep, being poor does place a limit on your desire for the best regardless of cost. :-( Of course being rich doesn't necessarily make you appreciate it though. And being poor or rich has no direct correlation with being smart or dumb. Trevor. A few years ago I walked into a horrible acoustical environment and heard really excellent SR. Barbara K and Richard Bowden were playing, so source quality was worthy. Mics were SM58's, and the board and speakers were all cheap Behringer kit. It sounded fabulous. Then I noted Chet Himes was the engineer. Like I said, "Talent" George Graves |
#132
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Graves wrote:
On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 10:43:43 PM UTC-7, Gary Eickmeier wrote: No, image height is not "captured." Neither the ears nor the microphones have any mechanism to detect height. It is strictly a pinna effect wherein certain frequencies seem to sound above where they should be. At the live event you don't hear this because your eyes override the effect. On playback, it often sems like the horns are higher than the rest of the instruments. Then perhaps you can tell me why multimiked recordings of symphony orchestras NEVER exhibit that phenomenon, but true minimalist stereo recordings always do? I can make it happen on a spotmiked recording, if you like. It's a trick, but it's not that hard a trick. It's true that most of the time it appears in minimalist recordings, it is an artifact of the room, though. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#133
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Graves wrote:
I also think that Dr. Amar Bose was pretty much of a self promoter, and a snake- oil salesman. Most of his products are overpriced and under-achieving. There was one exception, however. His original "Acoustic Wave" radio did sound spectacular for what it was, but was and remains outrageously over-priced (like most Bose products). Actually, I found the Acoustic Wave radio very annoying, because the transmission line gadget produced a big peak down at the bottom of the vocal range, which made baritone announcers on the radio less easy to understand. My mother was thinking of buying one because she liked the one a neighbor had. I told her to tune to the local NPR station and listen from the next room, then do the same thing with the old table radio in her kitchen. She was amazed that she could understand the announcer from the other room with the Philco but couldn't make a word he was saying out with the Bose. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#134
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Graves wrote:
Actually Hank, he's NOT a troll. He's dead serious. George Graves Thanks for that, George! Whew. Given his responses I hold no hope for his awakening. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#135
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wednesday, October 2, 2013 10:42:58 AM UTC-7, Scott Dorsey wrote:
George Graves wrote: I also think that Dr. Amar Bose was pretty much of a self promoter, and a snake- oil salesman. Most of his products are overpriced and under-achieving. There was one exception, however. His original "Acoustic Wave" radio did sound spectacular for what it was, but was and remains outrageously over-priced (like most Bose products). Actually, I found the Acoustic Wave radio very annoying, because the transmission line gadget produced a big peak down at the bottom of the vocal range, which made baritone announcers on the radio less easy to understand. My mother was thinking of buying one because she liked the one a neighbor had. I told her to tune to the local NPR station and listen from the next room, then do the same thing with the old table radio in her kitchen. She was amazed that she could understand the announcer from the other room with the Philco but couldn't make a word he was saying out with the Bose. --scott OK. I said that it sounded spectacular for what it was, I didn't say it sounded accurate. Music sounded BIG through it, much bigger that it should do. |
#136
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 10/2/2013 8:16 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
If you don't, there is always the old reporter's trick of recording two channels with 20 dB of gain between them, then picking the right one on playback. Very common back in the day when radio reporters would use cassette machines of very limited dynamic range and often have to leave them unattended at a lectern where they could not ride gains during a speech. That's where this sub-discussion started, sort of, with the statement that the Zoom H6 (and I added several other handhelds do the same thing) can record a backup track 10 dB below the main track. The Sony PCM-D50, though, takes it a step further and automatically splices it in when needed. -- For a good time, call http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com |
#137
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 2 Oct 2013 10:42:58 -0700, Scott Dorsey wrote
(in article ): Actually, I found the Acoustic Wave radio very annoying, because the transmission line gadget produced a big peak down at the bottom of the vocal range, which made baritone announcers on the radio less easy to understand. ------------------------------snip------------------------------ I hated that, too. Way, way too boomy for me. And Bose's bizarre design philosophy made them omit tone controls, balance controls, and a mono mode for radio reception, which is just insane in what is, essentially, a big clock radio. Henry Kloss' later Cambridge Soundworks version of the Bose Radio took care of all these problems. I also think its speakers were a lot better-sounding, and it was a little cheaper (like $295 instead of $350). Aside from the "no treble" problem of the 901's, the weird matching between the subwoofer and the satellites was always a strange one to me. Way too much missing low-mids for me. --MFW |
#138
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message
... Yep, being poor does place a limit on your desire for the best regardless of cost. :-( Of course being rich doesn't necessarily make you appreciate it though. And being poor or rich has no direct correlation with being smart or dumb. ------------------------------snip------------------------------ If BUDGET is your main issue, then I'd suggest you do this: 1) get a recent laptop computer with the OS of your choice 2) buy an inexpensive mixing board, like one of the Mackie Onyx or Yamaha models that has a USB or Firewire connection [widely available used] 3) use low-cost multitrack software to record from the board's preamps straight into the laptop. You can buy Boom Recorder Pro (as one example), which will record up to 256 channels for only $250. It's very fully-featured and is actually used by a lot of pro sound mixers around the world: http://www.vosgames.nl/products/BoomRecorder/ It's Mac-only, but there are other programs that will give you some of this functionality for very little money. At least this way, you're not depending on the really cheap mic pres in the Zoom, and you can rent or borrow really good external mics and place them in an optimum position for your recording. This is a *much* cheaper option than the Sound Devices, though it's not nearly as portable since you have a big mixer tied to a laptop. But for classical or rock music recorded in an auditorium or in a studio, it'll be absolutely fine. --MFW |
#139
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
n article ,
Marc Wielage wrote: On Wed, 2 Oct 2013 10:42:58 -0700, Scott Dorsey wrote (in article ): Actually, I found the Acoustic Wave radio very annoying, because the transmission line gadget produced a big peak down at the bottom of the vocal range, which made baritone announcers on the radio less easy to understand. ------------------------------snip------------------------------ I hated that, too. Way, way too boomy for me. And Bose's bizarre design philosophy made them omit tone controls, balance controls, and a mono mode for radio reception, which is just insane in what is, essentially, a big clock radio. Henry Kloss' later Cambridge Soundworks version of the Bose Radio took care of all these problems. I also think its speakers were a lot better-sounding, and it was a little cheaper (like $295 instead of $350). We're not talking about the same Bose radio, I don't think. The original Acoustic Wave radio is the big one. It sells for around $1000. I was not talking about the little one that you see advertised on TV all the time. Aside from the "no treble" problem of the 901's, the weird matching between the subwoofer and the satellites was always a strange one to me. Way too much missing low-mids for me. Yeah, the bass was all screwed-up on those things. When I first tried to put together a surround system in the mid 1970's (remember SQ "quadraphonic sound"?) I got a pair of used 901s "on approval" to use as rear channel speakers (sans the bass EQ box). I thought that perhaps their "direct/reflecting" malarkey would give a spacious rear-channel sound. the 901's weren't even any good in that application. I took 'em back to the dealer who had loaned 'em to me, and ended up buying a pair of used Hegeman speakers instead. |
#140
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Scott Dorsey wrote:
No, you can be faulted because you really don't know what you're doing, you have no experience in a normal studio environment, and you are telling people who have worked thirty years in professional studios that they are doing their job wrong. --scott Please cite that one! Gary |
#141
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
hank alrich wrote:
Marc Wielage wrote: On Tue, 1 Oct 2013 09:21:07 -0700, George Graves wrote (in article ): It might be because of his monitor speakers (Bose 901's !) and the way he has them configured. Your guess is as good as mine ------------------------------snip------------------------------ Say no more! A monitor's job is warning. In this case it doesn't work, because the "monitor" has a mouth full of mush. So all of you use the same monitor speakers? Directional boxes aimed at your face, with reflections from the room damped? Well, I hate to break it to you, but George Graves uses Martin Logan dipoles, and there is a lot of respect for Quads, Maggies, and MBL omnis. What do you think about those fools? Gary |
#142
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
William Sommerwerck wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. 1. Locate concrete wall. 2. Bang head against it until profuse bleeding begins. 3. Stop and sigh in relief. I am reminded of a story about John Logie Baird, the Scottish TV pioneer who espoused spinning-disk technology. It is said that he one day walked into the BBC labs where the people were working on (what was then) high-definition, all-electronic television. It is said that he walked out in a state of shock. I hope the audio equivalent of this event occurs -- soon -- with Mr Eickmeier taking the place of Mr Baird. That's what I like to see - an open mind from the guy with things he doesn't understand. Gary |
#143
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
hank alrich wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: 5. I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. My prototype speakers are designed along those lines ( a shaped radiation pattern designed around image modeling the typical live sound presentation) and the latest ones beat the Behringers and Linkwitz Orions in the Linkwitz Challenge at the AES. Long story shorter, you haven't heard my system so take your own advice and withhold judgement until you do. Okay, I get it. You're a troll. ****ing ridiculous crap you're spouting. Have at it. OK Hank - I will note you as not being friendly. But tell me what part of the above did you not believe? Gary |
#144
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: No, you can be faulted because you really don't know what you're doing, you have no experience in a normal studio environment, and you are telling people who have worked thirty years in professional studios that they are doing their job wrong. --scott Please cite that one! Gary Look in the mirror. Sighted and cited. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#145
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
hank alrich wrote: Marc Wielage wrote: On Tue, 1 Oct 2013 09:21:07 -0700, George Graves wrote (in article ): It might be because of his monitor speakers (Bose 901's !) and the way he has them configured. Your guess is as good as mine ------------------------------snip------------------------------ Say no more! A monitor's job is warning. In this case it doesn't work, because the "monitor" has a mouth full of mush. So all of you use the same monitor speakers? Directional boxes aimed at your face, with reflections from the room damped? Well, I hate to break it to you, but George Graves uses Martin Logan dipoles, and there is a lot of respect for Quads, Maggies, and MBL omnis. What do you think about those fools? Gary You have no idea what "we" use, and no, we don't all use the same kit. Drop the posturing. If you thought you'd be foolng poeople here you're not as intelligent as I had estimated. I've been wrong before. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#146
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Marc Wielage wrote:
You can buy Boom Recorder Pro (as one example), which will record up to 256 channels for only $250. It's very fully-featured and is actually used by a lot of pro sound mixers around the world: http://www.vosgames.nl/products/BoomRecorder/ It's Mac-only, but there are other programs that will give you some of this functionality for very little money. Reaper w"w"w"."c"o"c"k"o"s"."c"o"m"/"r"e"a"p"e"r"/" -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#147
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Graves wrote:
On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 6:04:10 PM UTC-7, Scott Dorsey wrote: George Graves wrote: Funny thing about imaging. It has to exist in the recording. Often, in mode= rn recordings, especially commercial pop/rock recordings it's not. It also = doesn't exist in multimiked/multi-channel classical recordings or in most c= ommercial jazz recordings. True stereo (the only way to get real image spec= ificity, image height and imaging front-to-back layering) just isn't done t= hat much, commercially And that, in short, is why people use things like the Bose 901s, which add artificial phase cues in there. Gotta say. I've NEVER been a fan of the 901s (or for that matter, any of Amar Bose' products). George Graves No you don't gotta say George. What you gotta do is try and absorb what I am telling you. It has nothing to do with any particular product, it is about the spatial nature of sound and the differences encountered between the live and the reproduced. Suppose I mocked you for using your dipolar speakers. They have this innacurate backwave that splashes reflected sound all over the room, don't you know what a fool you are, and on and on. What defense could you come up with for such ignorance? You would be left holding the bag, put in your place by a pack of children kicking your ankles. You have decided to pile on to me with these guys for some reason, whereas in the past we have been friends. You act as if oh ya, we all agree on how to record music and Gary doesn't know ****, ha ha Bose 901s, miking experiments, hard headed about recording strictly with spaced omni when you just received a disc I made with closely spaced cardioids. Don't you realize that some of these guys use the multi-miking that you despise? I am not worried about the lumps I have taken here. But I do hope that your past friendship was sincere and you are not an opportunist professional social climber shoving me under the bus to impress the others. I think that Bill Sommerwerck is an honest man who expresses in another thread that he doesn't understand everything. He got mad at me in a previous thread and said he was never talking to me ever again. Then he came back. I had to leave my audio club because one of the founding members, a "friend" of some 20 years, called me a lunatic and a whack job after I proved him wrong by winning the Linkwitz Challenge with my cheap little prototype speakers. I will never speak to him again in this lifetime. I guess there will be a party tomorrow when I get the H6 from UPS. Or maybe not. Gary |
#148
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
Suppose I mocked you for using your dipolar speakers. They have this innacurate backwave that splashes reflected sound all over the room, don't you know what a fool you are, and on and on. What defense could you come up with for such ignorance? You would be left holding the bag, put in your place by a pack of children kicking your ankles. Suppose you just stopped being so full of yourself and **** at the same time? Just suppose€¦ You can't get a decent recording. You've told us that. You refuse to listen to suggestions as to why that might be, beginning with your ****ed up "monitor" system and ending with your ****ed up mental processes. There is no way you can be helped. You already know it all. You've had your head up your ass for so long that you've come to thiunk darkness is light. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#149
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
hank alrich wrote:
Marc Wielage wrote: You can buy Boom Recorder Pro (as one example), which will record up to 256 channels for only $250. It's very fully-featured and is actually used by a lot of pro sound mixers around the world: http://www.vosgames.nl/products/BoomRecorder/ It's Mac-only, but there are other programs that will give you some of this functionality for very little money. Reaper w"w"w"."c"o"c"k"o"s"."c"o"m"/"r"e"a"p"e"r"/" Interesting. http://www.cockos.com/reaper/ -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#150
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
So all of you use the same monitor speakers? Directional boxes aimed at your face, with reflections from the room damped? Well, I hate to break it to you, but George Graves uses Martin Logan dipoles, and there is a lot of respect for Quads, Maggies, and MBL omnis. What do you think about those fools? My opinion is not on whether people are fools, but it is in my opinion a foolish choice to use less than 3 systems in two rooms. Gary Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#151
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Marc Wielage wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... Yep, being poor does place a limit on your desire for the best regardless of cost. :-( Of course being rich doesn't necessarily make you appreciate it though. And being poor or rich has no direct correlation with being smart or dumb. ------------------------------snip------------------------------ If BUDGET is your main issue, then I'd suggest you do this: 1) get a recent laptop computer with the OS of your choice 2) buy an inexpensive mixing board, like one of the Mackie Onyx or Yamaha models that has a USB or Firewire connection [widely available used] 3) use low-cost multitrack software to record from the board's preamps straight into the laptop. You can buy Boom Recorder Pro (as one example), which will record up to 256 channels for only $250. It's very fully-featured and is actually used by a lot of pro sound mixers around the world: http://www.vosgames.nl/products/BoomRecorder/ It's Mac-only, but there are other programs that will give you some of this functionality for very little money. At least this way, you're not depending on the really cheap mic pres in the Zoom, and you can rent or borrow really good external mics and place them in an optimum position for your recording. This is a *much* cheaper option than the Sound Devices, though it's not nearly as portable since you have a big mixer tied to a laptop. But for classical or rock music recorded in an auditorium or in a studio, it'll be absolutely fine. --MFW Thanks Marc but please let me explain once again - not that I have to but because you have been a big help and a sincere man. I record the local wind band as my vehicle for learning recording and giving them copies for practically nothing but gratitude for letting me record. On concert night, I have to record them by placing my stand at center stage as inconspicuously as possible. I then dress and drag the cables down to as simple a recorder as possible and I sit in the front row with headset and supply of batteries. I really can't set up a little recording studio on the lip of the stage or at my feet because people still need to walk by. I have been using a Yamaha mixer going into the Tascam DR07 at rehearsals where I have all the room I need to experiment. But at concert time I have had to limit it to just two mikes and the Tascam for obvious practical reasons, and even at that I have had to employ a battery powered stereo microphone power supply in line with the microphone cables. Neat little setup and I have gotten some good results. Not like if I was doing a more controlled studio environment recording, but good for a live event. A professional friend of mine does similar work with similar miking on a tall stand, but he drags a couple hundred feet of cable to the back of the room. One venue has a way to get up in the ceiling and hang microphones that lead down to a control panel at the side of the auditorium, but I don't think that my type of microphones would be suited to hanging. Bottom line, the Zoom will be ideal for both rehearsals and concerts, because it is self contained, small, and doesn't need additional power for the microphones. And it should have decent meters, though I have been very successful with the R16s terrible meters. I get home and download to an XP Pro computer to edit in Adobe Audition 2.0. I am still learning how to use that program, but I think I have it now. It is a really neat program and every new edition of Audition has reduced the feature set until it can no longer even author a CD. Of late, I have purchased a little DAC that I use to go out of the computer with an optical cable to my receiver so I can hear my mix on the big system before I even export to stereo for the CD tracks. Thanks, Gary |
#152
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
hank alrich wrote: A monitor's job is warning. In this case it doesn't work, because the "monitor" has a mouth full of mush. So all of you use the same monitor speakers? Directional boxes aimed at your face, with reflections from the room damped? Well, I hate to break it to you, but George Graves uses Martin Logan dipoles, and there is a lot of respect for Quads, Maggies, and MBL omnis. What do you think about those fools? At least none of them rave about the fantastic sound quality of a pair of Bose 901s in an untreated room, which is what you claim to have. Have you ever been in the control room of a proper studio? They don't all use the same monitors, but all the setups I've seen have been designed as part of the room to produce an uncoloured sound. The mix is then checked on various grotboxes ranging from a typical hi-fi enthusiast's setup (Cheapish amp and a pair of NS-10s or equivalent) to a cheap ghetto blaster via a normal car stereo to verify that they sound good on those, too. Nowadays, you also check the mix as an mp3 on a pair of cheap earbuds attached to an iPod or similar. You could probably improve your monitoring by using something like a pair of Sony 7506 or even Beyer DT-100 headphones for an initial mix, and buy a pair of, say, Wharfedale Active Diamonds for a final check. Then do something to tame your listening room's bass and other reflections. Some Auralex foam damping at the reflection points between your ears and the speakers is a good start. That'll cost under GBP1000 in total. Just the speakers and the foam will improve your results more and cost about the same as buying a Zoom H6, before you add any extra mics and preamps you want before you can actually record 6 channels of live audio on the H6. Incidentally, the Sony D50 that others have referred to is only a tiny bit more expensive than the Zoom for a better built product. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#153
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
OK Hank - I will note you as not being friendly. But tell me what part of the above did you not believe? I can't speak for Hank, but in my case, all of it. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#154
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
William Sommerwerck wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. 1. Locate concrete wall. 2. Bang head against it until profuse bleeding begins. 3. Stop and sigh in relief. I am reminded of a story about John Logie Baird, the Scottish TV pioneer who espoused spinning-disk technology. It is said that he one day walked into the BBC labs where the people were working on (what was then) high-definition, all-electronic television. It is said that he walked out in a state of shock. I hope the audio equivalent of this event occurs -- soon -- with Mr Eickmeier taking the place of Mr Baird. That's what I like to see - an open mind from the guy with things he doesn't understand. Pot. Kettle. Black. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#155
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
I really can't set up a little recording studio on the lip of the stage or at my feet because people still need to walk by. I have been using a Yamaha mixer going into the Tascam DR07 at rehearsals where I have all the room I need to experiment. But at concert time I have had to limit it to just two mikes and the Tascam for obvious practical reasons, and even at that I have had to employ a battery powered stereo microphone power supply in line with the microphone cables. Neat little setup and I have gotten some good results. Not like if I was doing a more controlled studio environment recording, but good for a live event. Why? Put your mics upon stands where you want them, then run a snake to where you can sit out of line of sight. I do exactly this at times, and nobody knows the concert is being recorded, as they assume the microphones that they see are part of the sound reinforcement system. If you do this, you can set up your "small recording studio" in the next room, or even outside in your car. I get home and download to an XP Pro computer to edit in Adobe Audition 2.0. I am still learning how to use that program, but I think I have it now. It is a really neat program and every new edition of Audition has reduced the feature set until it can no longer even author a CD. Of late, I have purchased a little DAC that I use to go out of the computer with an optical cable to my receiver so I can hear my mix on the big system before I even export to stereo for the CD tracks. If all you're doing is mixing down a multitrack recording, try Audacity. It's free. Then you can use a free CD authoring program to put the output onto a CD, including track titles and such for players that can read CD text. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#156
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
hank alrich wrote: Gary Eickmeier wrote: 5. I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. My prototype speakers are designed along those lines ( a shaped radiation pattern designed around image modeling the typical live sound presentation) and the latest ones beat the Behringers and Linkwitz Orions in the Linkwitz Challenge at the AES. Long story shorter, you haven't heard my system so take your own advice and withhold judgement until you do. Okay, I get it. You're a troll. ****ing ridiculous crap you're spouting. Have at it. OK Hank - I will note you as not being friendly. But tell me what part of the above did you not believe? Gary I am noted for being friendly. I won't suffer fools, at all, past the point where they have offered full validation of their foolishness. Then I am noted for being extremely blunt. I do not _believe_ you know what you're about. I do not _believe_ you have a real interest in learning. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#157
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Williamson wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: OK Hank - I will note you as not being friendly. But tell me what part of the above did you not believe? I can't speak for Hank, but in my case, all of it. ˆš Apparently you are able to speak for me in this case, John. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#158
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Williamson wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: I really can't set up a little recording studio on the lip of the stage or at my feet because people still need to walk by. I have been using a Yamaha mixer going into the Tascam DR07 at rehearsals where I have all the room I need to experiment. But at concert time I have had to limit it to just two mikes and the Tascam for obvious practical reasons, and even at that I have had to employ a battery powered stereo microphone power supply in line with the microphone cables. Neat little setup and I have gotten some good results. Not like if I was doing a more controlled studio environment recording, but good for a live event. Why? Put your mics upon stands where you want them, then run a snake to where you can sit out of line of sight. I do exactly this at times, and nobody knows the concert is being recorded, as they assume the microphones that they see are part of the sound reinforcement system. If you do this, you can set up your "small recording studio" in the next room, or even outside in your car. I get home and download to an XP Pro computer to edit in Adobe Audition 2.0. I am still learning how to use that program, but I think I have it now. It is a really neat program and every new edition of Audition has reduced the feature set until it can no longer even author a CD. Of late, I have purchased a little DAC that I use to go out of the computer with an optical cable to my receiver so I can hear my mix on the big system before I even export to stereo for the CD tracks. If all you're doing is mixing down a multitrack recording, try Audacity. It's free. Then you can use a free CD authoring program to put the output onto a CD, including track titles and such for players that can read CD text. Brings us back to the need for the best monitoring one can muster while recording live music. Direct sound bleed into one's headphone feed while sitting front and center leaves one largely clueless about the sound being fed to recorders. Perhaps if Gary strapped a pair of 901's to his head€¦ -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#159
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary Eickmeier wrote:
So all of you use the same monitor speakers? Directional boxes aimed at your face, with reflections from the room damped? Well, I hate to break it to you, but George Graves uses Martin Logan dipoles, and there is a lot of respect for Quads, Maggies, and MBL omnis. Yes. For the most part everyone does use the same monitor system and configuration, because it translates well. I do use Maggies, but I also use NHT A-20s. And I got to the point of being able to use the Maggies only after 20 years of mixing on conventional soffit-mounted systems, because they don't translate perfectly. I have never heard of anyone mixing on Martin-Logans or MBL speakers, and it has been decades since I have heard of anyone mixing on Quad ESLs. If your playback system doesn't translate, you will have to work around it, and that's not easy and sometimes impossible. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#160
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Gary Eickmeier wrote: hank alrich wrote: Gary Eickmeier wrote: 5. I use Bose 901s in my home system because of a life-long study of the spatial nature of sound. My paper is called An Image Model Theory for Stereophonic Sound. The 901s do not sound mushy, poopy, overly diffuse or misguided if used properly. Quite the opposite, they are the only correctly designed speaker in the world at present. My prototype speakers are designed along those lines ( a shaped radiation pattern designed around image modeling the typical live sound presentation) and the latest ones beat the Behringers and Linkwitz Orions in the Linkwitz Challenge at the AES. Long story shorter, you haven't heard my system so take your own advice and withhold judgement until you do. Okay, I get it. You're a troll. ****ing ridiculous crap you're spouting. Have at it. OK Hank - I will note you as not being friendly. But tell me what part of the above did you not believe? I don't know about Hank, but I don't really believe a word of it. I think you are deluding yourself, and that makes me feel sad. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Zoom H2n | High End Audio | |||
Zoom H2n | High End Audio | |||
Zoom H2? | Pro Audio | |||
Zoom H2 vs H4 | Pro Audio | |||
I just got the Zoom H2 | Pro Audio |