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#81
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TS wrote:
Is there a piece of s/w that does this 1 minute track split automatically (with no gaps)? Where can I get it? Amadeus II does this. 1) open wav or aiff or ... 2) selection/generate marks, set first mark and intervall between marks 3) selection/split according to marks. Then drag all fragments into playlist in iTunes (or Toast or Jam...) set pauses to 0 which at least Jam and iTunes can do, and click "burn". Lars -- lars farm // http://www.farm.se |
#82
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#83
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#84
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1096282326k@trad... There's no getting around it - taking a raw recording and turning it into something consumer-friendly takes time. That's what recording engineers get paid for. The problem with a church gig is that it's rarely a paying gig, so there's a temptation to try to find timesaving shortcuts. I would say his "service" has value and that could be his contribution (as in "tithes") versus giving money. |
#85
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1096282326k@trad... There's no getting around it - taking a raw recording and turning it into something consumer-friendly takes time. That's what recording engineers get paid for. The problem with a church gig is that it's rarely a paying gig, so there's a temptation to try to find timesaving shortcuts. I would say his "service" has value and that could be his contribution (as in "tithes") versus giving money. |
#86
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it has to be a service that
the church would pay for if you didn't offer to do it without cash payment. And you probably would get questioned if you charged $150/hour for four hours a week and wrote it off as a donation, but you could get something out of it. In some instances, you may have to actually get paid and then donate that payment to the church. That's documentation in itself. Again, the fee has to be reasonable. of course you can write off the donation but you need to also list the "actually get paid" as income it becomes a wash George |
#87
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it has to be a service that
the church would pay for if you didn't offer to do it without cash payment. And you probably would get questioned if you charged $150/hour for four hours a week and wrote it off as a donation, but you could get something out of it. In some instances, you may have to actually get paid and then donate that payment to the church. That's documentation in itself. Again, the fee has to be reasonable. of course you can write off the donation but you need to also list the "actually get paid" as income it becomes a wash George |
#88
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Ben Bradley wrote:
On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 00:16:38 GMT, Phil Nelson wrote: Paul Stamler wrote: "TS" wrote in message .... The main weakness is track start times. A church service probably won't have enough real silence to trigger automatic start IDs, and even if it does, I don't know how anyone can get this right, especially with a Pastor that doesn't follow the outline reliably, or doesn't even have one. Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often don't even have one. I may have a minority view in this, but I think the whole point of having technology is that he doesn't have to. My view is that if the technology won't work with the Pastor, then we need to get new technology, not a new Pastor. What I do is digitally record the entire service and cut everything but the sermon in editing. That way I don't miss anything, and I can find the right place for track breaks. Sometimes time-consuming, but at least possible. Also, I always find something that needs adjusting, like the Pastor clapping in front of his lapel mic. There's a program that makes this incredibly fast, it's at cdwave.com. Also, if you use the "save .cue file" feature and then load the .cue file in a CD burner program that recognizes it, you'll be amazed that you can split and hour's worth of 20 tracks in as little as ten minutes or less. If you're going record on hard disk or rip the CDR to a PC anyway, it's well worth using it. Thanks for the pointer. I have been using CDwave for recording, but I started with Audacity so that's what I am used to for editing. I will look at the CDwave site more carefully. Not insuperable challenges, but things to think about. Of coure, you could record on CD-R, clean up in a PC, then duplicate. If I could, I would do a digital recording and a "live" CD, so anyone in a hurry could get the CD the same day, and if I didn't have time to do the editing, there would still be a CD available the next week. Too bad we can't afford the equipment. I don't see equipment cost as a problem. We record our services on As it happens, it's not necessarily a problem. I was thinking of the impossibility of getting budget to buy a CD recorder, but the PC we already have could do this job. I just didn't think of using it that way. CDR, when there's been a special musical service, I've ripped it on my computer at home, adjusted levels/cut silence as appropriate, split tracks with cdwave and made copies for participants and to replace the original CDR. I've thought about recording to an older PC (a 200MHz machine is fine for recording a stereo CD data rate), but the problems a 1. the idea of adding a PC and monitor to the rack of equipment, and what it would look like (an LCD monitor would look better, but they cost actual money), and For us, there is already a Power Point PC, so, no big deal. 2. the idea that when I'm not there (either not at the service, or worse, up front singing) and someone else does sound (a volunteer who may barely know how to get sound), do they really need to learn to run some DAW software as well as everything else they need to do? I'm moving away, so I won't be doing sound here regularly for much longer. OTOH, this is a UU congregation (smalish, not much money) that for some reason has DSL (probably for last-minute sermon research...), WiFi, and a separate server machine (others handle all this, I have no involvement), so why not have the service recorded to hard disk as well as CDR, and put the machine on the network? Furthermore, I just met Our New Sound Guy who seems very qualified to do all this. I do this. We have a server for the office, I keep MP3s of the sermons on it for anyone in the office to listen to. Fortunately I have a fast DSL at home to upload the files after I edit them. -- Phil Nelson |
#89
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Ben Bradley wrote:
On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 00:16:38 GMT, Phil Nelson wrote: Paul Stamler wrote: "TS" wrote in message .... The main weakness is track start times. A church service probably won't have enough real silence to trigger automatic start IDs, and even if it does, I don't know how anyone can get this right, especially with a Pastor that doesn't follow the outline reliably, or doesn't even have one. Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often don't even have one. I may have a minority view in this, but I think the whole point of having technology is that he doesn't have to. My view is that if the technology won't work with the Pastor, then we need to get new technology, not a new Pastor. What I do is digitally record the entire service and cut everything but the sermon in editing. That way I don't miss anything, and I can find the right place for track breaks. Sometimes time-consuming, but at least possible. Also, I always find something that needs adjusting, like the Pastor clapping in front of his lapel mic. There's a program that makes this incredibly fast, it's at cdwave.com. Also, if you use the "save .cue file" feature and then load the .cue file in a CD burner program that recognizes it, you'll be amazed that you can split and hour's worth of 20 tracks in as little as ten minutes or less. If you're going record on hard disk or rip the CDR to a PC anyway, it's well worth using it. Thanks for the pointer. I have been using CDwave for recording, but I started with Audacity so that's what I am used to for editing. I will look at the CDwave site more carefully. Not insuperable challenges, but things to think about. Of coure, you could record on CD-R, clean up in a PC, then duplicate. If I could, I would do a digital recording and a "live" CD, so anyone in a hurry could get the CD the same day, and if I didn't have time to do the editing, there would still be a CD available the next week. Too bad we can't afford the equipment. I don't see equipment cost as a problem. We record our services on As it happens, it's not necessarily a problem. I was thinking of the impossibility of getting budget to buy a CD recorder, but the PC we already have could do this job. I just didn't think of using it that way. CDR, when there's been a special musical service, I've ripped it on my computer at home, adjusted levels/cut silence as appropriate, split tracks with cdwave and made copies for participants and to replace the original CDR. I've thought about recording to an older PC (a 200MHz machine is fine for recording a stereo CD data rate), but the problems a 1. the idea of adding a PC and monitor to the rack of equipment, and what it would look like (an LCD monitor would look better, but they cost actual money), and For us, there is already a Power Point PC, so, no big deal. 2. the idea that when I'm not there (either not at the service, or worse, up front singing) and someone else does sound (a volunteer who may barely know how to get sound), do they really need to learn to run some DAW software as well as everything else they need to do? I'm moving away, so I won't be doing sound here regularly for much longer. OTOH, this is a UU congregation (smalish, not much money) that for some reason has DSL (probably for last-minute sermon research...), WiFi, and a separate server machine (others handle all this, I have no involvement), so why not have the service recorded to hard disk as well as CDR, and put the machine on the network? Furthermore, I just met Our New Sound Guy who seems very qualified to do all this. I do this. We have a server for the office, I keep MP3s of the sermons on it for anyone in the office to listen to. Fortunately I have a fast DSL at home to upload the files after I edit them. -- Phil Nelson |
#90
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Phil Nelson wrote:
Ben Bradley wrote: Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often Sorry, I wasn't paying attention when I wrote that. I meant he doesn't follow the sermon outline. The order of service is another issue. Mostly that is followed. But, I still wind up with 45 minutes of sermon, which is a lot to FF through on a CD player. So break it into tracks (usually about 7). But I want the tracks to have some logical relation to the sermon outline, or the content if the outline isn't followed exactly, and getting that right just can't be done live, as far as I can tell. I suppose my method may be unusual, I developed it more or less from scratch, with no idea what anyone else is doing, using all open-source software (except for Windows XP, because they wouldn't go for Linux). -- Phil Nelson |
#91
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Phil Nelson wrote:
Ben Bradley wrote: Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often Sorry, I wasn't paying attention when I wrote that. I meant he doesn't follow the sermon outline. The order of service is another issue. Mostly that is followed. But, I still wind up with 45 minutes of sermon, which is a lot to FF through on a CD player. So break it into tracks (usually about 7). But I want the tracks to have some logical relation to the sermon outline, or the content if the outline isn't followed exactly, and getting that right just can't be done live, as far as I can tell. I suppose my method may be unusual, I developed it more or less from scratch, with no idea what anyone else is doing, using all open-source software (except for Windows XP, because they wouldn't go for Linux). -- Phil Nelson |
#92
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I have been using CD Wave Editor for a while and find it to be great. Last
night, after reading this topic, I discovered that it could do the 1 minute splits. It is extremely easy to use and is $15 to register. www.cdwave.com John "TS" wrote in message ... "Patrick Dunford" wrote in message . nz... In article in rec.audio.pro on Sun, 26 Sep 2004 15:24:44 +0000 (UTC), TS says... Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. Currently we use tapes which are poor quality as the decks are old and worn and also, they can only be duplicated is real time or the tapes can be run at double speed to reduce this time. We now need better quality and more omportantly we need to speed the process. I was thinking of getting a CD Recorder such as the Denon CDR-1500 or the Pioneer PDR-609 to take an anolog feed from the mixing console (Allen and Heath GL2000) and record to CDR. Then to get a CD Duplicator to copy this onty several CDs at a time. Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. Any suggestions greatly appreciated. The biggest issue with CDs is, ho hum, you can't just stop a CD and come back to it later like you can with a tape. The next best solution is to split the whole recording into 1 minute tracks, which can be done with some readily available software. Other than that, it's a good plan, being used by lots of churches now. Is there a piece of s/w that does this 1 minute track split automatically (with no gaps)? Where can I get it? Cheers |
#93
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I have been using CD Wave Editor for a while and find it to be great. Last
night, after reading this topic, I discovered that it could do the 1 minute splits. It is extremely easy to use and is $15 to register. www.cdwave.com John "TS" wrote in message ... "Patrick Dunford" wrote in message . nz... In article in rec.audio.pro on Sun, 26 Sep 2004 15:24:44 +0000 (UTC), TS says... Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. Currently we use tapes which are poor quality as the decks are old and worn and also, they can only be duplicated is real time or the tapes can be run at double speed to reduce this time. We now need better quality and more omportantly we need to speed the process. I was thinking of getting a CD Recorder such as the Denon CDR-1500 or the Pioneer PDR-609 to take an anolog feed from the mixing console (Allen and Heath GL2000) and record to CDR. Then to get a CD Duplicator to copy this onty several CDs at a time. Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. Any suggestions greatly appreciated. The biggest issue with CDs is, ho hum, you can't just stop a CD and come back to it later like you can with a tape. The next best solution is to split the whole recording into 1 minute tracks, which can be done with some readily available software. Other than that, it's a good plan, being used by lots of churches now. Is there a piece of s/w that does this 1 minute track split automatically (with no gaps)? Where can I get it? Cheers |
#94
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I use the RNC for my recording because some preachers can get "strong" in
words. It also helps intelligibility by leveling the volume. I would definitely use it. John "TS" wrote in message ... "Leoaw3" wrote in message ... Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. If not, you might consider a hard disk recorder or integrated unit like the Alesis Masterlink which can record in 24 bit, and copy down onto CD. Having the extra bit depth would help if the recording level was set too low, or if you needed more headroom. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. -lee- Thanks, The requirement is for them to be available asap on the Sunday which is why I am keen on recording dirently to CD. I had forgottem about the clipping of high levels. We already use a compressor for the tapes, maybe I need another one after this to limit the signal further. Cheers TS |
#95
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I use the RNC for my recording because some preachers can get "strong" in
words. It also helps intelligibility by leveling the volume. I would definitely use it. John "TS" wrote in message ... "Leoaw3" wrote in message ... Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. If not, you might consider a hard disk recorder or integrated unit like the Alesis Masterlink which can record in 24 bit, and copy down onto CD. Having the extra bit depth would help if the recording level was set too low, or if you needed more headroom. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. -lee- Thanks, The requirement is for them to be available asap on the Sunday which is why I am keen on recording dirently to CD. I had forgottem about the clipping of high levels. We already use a compressor for the tapes, maybe I need another one after this to limit the signal further. Cheers TS |
#96
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"John Phillips" wrote in message
. com... I use the RNC for my recording because some preachers can get "strong" in words. It also helps intelligibility by leveling the volume. I would definitely use it. We once had a discussion here over what ratios worked better with different types of preachers. I recommend limiting for fire and brimstone and expansion for sermons on hermeneutics which can tend to be kind of "dry" and undynamic. |
#97
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"John Phillips" wrote in message
. com... I use the RNC for my recording because some preachers can get "strong" in words. It also helps intelligibility by leveling the volume. I would definitely use it. We once had a discussion here over what ratios worked better with different types of preachers. I recommend limiting for fire and brimstone and expansion for sermons on hermeneutics which can tend to be kind of "dry" and undynamic. |
#98
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In article m in
rec.audio.pro on Mon, 27 Sep 2004 01:47:08 GMT, John Phillips jsp5646 @hotmail.com says... I never thought of the 1 minute tracks, interesting. What is the name of the software package that will do this? A shareware package called CD Wave Audio Editor by Mike Looijmans will do it. I guess some others will too. Some of our people just want the sermon while some want the full service (especially the music) so I cut the service into three tracks. 1. Start of service to sermon 2. Sermon 3. After sermon to the end of service. I then make the sermon track 1 with the other two following. The real issue is to be able to get quickly to wherever you stopped the CD to carry on playing it. Track skipping is faster than holding down the Fast Forward button. |
#99
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In article m in
rec.audio.pro on Mon, 27 Sep 2004 01:47:08 GMT, John Phillips jsp5646 @hotmail.com says... I never thought of the 1 minute tracks, interesting. What is the name of the software package that will do this? A shareware package called CD Wave Audio Editor by Mike Looijmans will do it. I guess some others will too. Some of our people just want the sermon while some want the full service (especially the music) so I cut the service into three tracks. 1. Start of service to sermon 2. Sermon 3. After sermon to the end of service. I then make the sermon track 1 with the other two following. The real issue is to be able to get quickly to wherever you stopped the CD to carry on playing it. Track skipping is faster than holding down the Fast Forward button. |
#100
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In article in rec.audio.pro on
Mon, 27 Sep 2004 16:57:09 +0000 (UTC), TS says... "Patrick Dunford" wrote in message . nz... In article in rec.audio.pro on Sun, 26 Sep 2004 15:24:44 +0000 (UTC), TS says... Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. Currently we use tapes which are poor quality as the decks are old and worn and also, they can only be duplicated is real time or the tapes can be run at double speed to reduce this time. We now need better quality and more omportantly we need to speed the process. I was thinking of getting a CD Recorder such as the Denon CDR-1500 or the Pioneer PDR-609 to take an anolog feed from the mixing console (Allen and Heath GL2000) and record to CDR. Then to get a CD Duplicator to copy this onty several CDs at a time. Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. Any suggestions greatly appreciated. The biggest issue with CDs is, ho hum, you can't just stop a CD and come back to it later like you can with a tape. The next best solution is to split the whole recording into 1 minute tracks, which can be done with some readily available software. Other than that, it's a good plan, being used by lots of churches now. Is there a piece of s/w that does this 1 minute track split automatically (with no gaps)? Where can I get it? CD Wave Audio Editor (shareware), Split at Intervals and set the interval to 1 minute. Gaps are a matter for your burning software. 2 second gaps are inserted automatically if you burn in TAO. No gaps if you burn in DAO/SAO |
#101
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In article in rec.audio.pro on
Mon, 27 Sep 2004 16:57:09 +0000 (UTC), TS says... "Patrick Dunford" wrote in message . nz... In article in rec.audio.pro on Sun, 26 Sep 2004 15:24:44 +0000 (UTC), TS says... Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. Currently we use tapes which are poor quality as the decks are old and worn and also, they can only be duplicated is real time or the tapes can be run at double speed to reduce this time. We now need better quality and more omportantly we need to speed the process. I was thinking of getting a CD Recorder such as the Denon CDR-1500 or the Pioneer PDR-609 to take an anolog feed from the mixing console (Allen and Heath GL2000) and record to CDR. Then to get a CD Duplicator to copy this onty several CDs at a time. Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. Any suggestions greatly appreciated. The biggest issue with CDs is, ho hum, you can't just stop a CD and come back to it later like you can with a tape. The next best solution is to split the whole recording into 1 minute tracks, which can be done with some readily available software. Other than that, it's a good plan, being used by lots of churches now. Is there a piece of s/w that does this 1 minute track split automatically (with no gaps)? Where can I get it? CD Wave Audio Editor (shareware), Split at Intervals and set the interval to 1 minute. Gaps are a matter for your burning software. 2 second gaps are inserted automatically if you burn in TAO. No gaps if you burn in DAO/SAO |
#102
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On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 20:58:51 GMT, Phil Nelson
wrote: Ben Bradley wrote: On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 00:16:38 GMT, Phil Nelson wrote: Paul Stamler wrote: "TS" wrote in message ... The main weakness is track start times. A church service probably won't have enough real silence to trigger automatic start IDs, and even if it does, I don't know how anyone can get this right, especially with a Pastor that doesn't follow the outline reliably, or doesn't even have one. Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often don't even have one. I may have a minority view in this, but I think the whole point of having technology is that he doesn't have to. My view is that if the technology won't work with the Pastor, then we need to get new technology, not a new Pastor. That's common in churches of an Evangelical stripe, particularly when there's only a single service. One of my many sisters used to do four services as worship leader. The early services had to go like clockwork, lest there be an untenable situation in the parking lot. The late service didn't need to be and occasionally was VERY long. |
#103
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On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 20:58:51 GMT, Phil Nelson
wrote: Ben Bradley wrote: On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 00:16:38 GMT, Phil Nelson wrote: Paul Stamler wrote: "TS" wrote in message ... The main weakness is track start times. A church service probably won't have enough real silence to trigger automatic start IDs, and even if it does, I don't know how anyone can get this right, especially with a Pastor that doesn't follow the outline reliably, or doesn't even have one. Does he not follow the Order Of Service? Is it an option to get a new minister? I forget what model CDR recorder we have, but the main complaint I have is that the track-increment button is on the remote, and there's no such button on the recorder's front panel. No, he doesn't always follow the order of service. Guest speakers often don't even have one. I may have a minority view in this, but I think the whole point of having technology is that he doesn't have to. My view is that if the technology won't work with the Pastor, then we need to get new technology, not a new Pastor. That's common in churches of an Evangelical stripe, particularly when there's only a single service. One of my many sisters used to do four services as worship leader. The early services had to go like clockwork, lest there be an untenable situation in the parking lot. The late service didn't need to be and occasionally was VERY long. |
#104
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"Sugarite" wrote in message
The problem of many older people not having CD players is a valid one, and a way to treat that is to ask the congregation and perhaps place a classified ad asking for obselete but working CD players, since they're not worth $20 these days, and folks generally come through. BUT ** make sure they can play burned CD-R's ** before giving them out. If you look at the cost of replacing a tape duplicator and tape recorders, you may find that you can afford to simply buy a fair number of inexpensive CD players and give them away to the people who can't or won't buy one for themselves. |
#105
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"Sugarite" wrote in message
The problem of many older people not having CD players is a valid one, and a way to treat that is to ask the congregation and perhaps place a classified ad asking for obselete but working CD players, since they're not worth $20 these days, and folks generally come through. BUT ** make sure they can play burned CD-R's ** before giving them out. If you look at the cost of replacing a tape duplicator and tape recorders, you may find that you can afford to simply buy a fair number of inexpensive CD players and give them away to the people who can't or won't buy one for themselves. |
#106
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TS wrote:
Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. If you multi-post instead of cross-posting, then at least tell us that you so do, so that it is possible to follow up in the most relevant forum. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#107
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TS wrote:
Hi, I need to find a new way to record our church services. If you multi-post instead of cross-posting, then at least tell us that you so do, so that it is possible to follow up in the most relevant forum. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#108
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Leoaw3 wrote:
Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. I don't understand why. Also I think that the CD-recorder ploy, if chosen, will be abandoned on the first vibration caused write error that renders a CD useless. The computer will still be used for high speed duplication, not also using it as the recording device will be to double the cost of the required setup. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. Just what is the difference? - a single digital clip is no more audible than a single power amp clip and you surely do not have the useless 10 dB zone without full frequency range and with gradually increased muddying, what you have is there for your full use. -lee- Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#109
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Leoaw3 wrote:
Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. I don't understand why. Also I think that the CD-recorder ploy, if chosen, will be abandoned on the first vibration caused write error that renders a CD useless. The computer will still be used for high speed duplication, not also using it as the recording device will be to double the cost of the required setup. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. Just what is the difference? - a single digital clip is no more audible than a single power amp clip and you surely do not have the useless 10 dB zone without full frequency range and with gradually increased muddying, what you have is there for your full use. -lee- Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#110
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"Ricky W. Hunt" wrote:
"TS" wrote in message ... Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. This is a side note but I've just run into a problem with this. I don't know about your church but most churches tend to have a preponderance of older people, many of which do not have CD players. True, not all people have CD players. The un-zoned chinesoid dvd-players over here are generally DKK 450 in the shops and - on sale - DKK 250, it should translate to a USD 29.95 price range over your way. Portable players are as I recall it available in the same price range. I was stunned at how many didn't. You might want to check on this before you make the switch because you WILL SURELY hear about it. The technology switch should not be insurmountable with the low cost of a player, but it may need due preparation so as to insure acceptance. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#111
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"Ricky W. Hunt" wrote:
"TS" wrote in message ... Am I on the right track here? I am reluctant to go to the complexity of using a PC for recording. This is a side note but I've just run into a problem with this. I don't know about your church but most churches tend to have a preponderance of older people, many of which do not have CD players. True, not all people have CD players. The un-zoned chinesoid dvd-players over here are generally DKK 450 in the shops and - on sale - DKK 250, it should translate to a USD 29.95 price range over your way. Portable players are as I recall it available in the same price range. I was stunned at how many didn't. You might want to check on this before you make the switch because you WILL SURELY hear about it. The technology switch should not be insurmountable with the low cost of a player, but it may need due preparation so as to insure acceptance. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#112
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On Sun, 3 Oct 2004 07:01:08 -0400, Peter Larsen wrote
(in article ): Leoaw3 wrote: Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. I don't understand why. Also I think that the CD-recorder ploy, if chosen, will be abandoned on the first vibration caused write error that renders a CD useless. The computer will still be used for high speed duplication, not also using it as the recording device will be to double the cost of the required setup. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. Just what is the difference? - a single digital clip is no more audible than a single power amp clip and you surely do not have the useless 10 dB zone without full frequency range and with gradually increased muddying, what you have is there for your full use. -lee- Kind regards Peter Larsen That being said. The Sony w33 and w66 dedicated cd recorders have input limiters and do pretty well in that situation. Regards, Ty Ford -- Ty Ford's equipment reviews, audio samples, rates and other audiocentric stuff are at www.tyford.com |
#113
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On Sun, 3 Oct 2004 07:01:08 -0400, Peter Larsen wrote
(in article ): Leoaw3 wrote: Will you be wanting the duplicate CDs immediately after the service? If so, then recording directly to CD makes more sense. I don't understand why. Also I think that the CD-recorder ploy, if chosen, will be abandoned on the first vibration caused write error that renders a CD useless. The computer will still be used for high speed duplication, not also using it as the recording device will be to double the cost of the required setup. Remember, recording digitally does not have the same forgiving qualities as tape. If your levels go too high - you distort. period. Just what is the difference? - a single digital clip is no more audible than a single power amp clip and you surely do not have the useless 10 dB zone without full frequency range and with gradually increased muddying, what you have is there for your full use. -lee- Kind regards Peter Larsen That being said. The Sony w33 and w66 dedicated cd recorders have input limiters and do pretty well in that situation. Regards, Ty Ford -- Ty Ford's equipment reviews, audio samples, rates and other audiocentric stuff are at www.tyford.com |
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