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Carey Carlan wrote: Jay Kadis wrote in : The flushing up of the low-amplitude sonic details by compression and limiting and judicious spectral tweeking with EQ make the sound realistic in the sense that you can hear the details of the sounds even when they would have otherwise been masked in a complicated mix. But it's not what you would hear in the tracking room. The term hyper-realistic comes from Dan Levitin, a former editor for RE/P and now a cognitive psychologist at McGill. I understand and agree with compression and EQ when creating a mix. Do you agree that, given an agreeable source, they aren't necessary in a solo stereo setting? Absolutely. I was only referring to rock'n'roll context. But how about in the mastering stage? I'm editing an early music recorder CD that my brother is co-producing, Buxtehude and the like, and they are concerned with getting the volume of the CD up to "commercial" levels. I think we're going to need to use some clean limiting on that. But I wouldn't mess with the dynamics any more than that. I am sometimes asked for a "car" mix, meaning squashed to hell. I can do that, too, and it even sounds OK when I use the limiter built into my Spider (an underrated feature of that august machine). But my main focus is full dynamic range. The sample I posted on my webpage approaches 70 dB from quietest to peak. Then there's the issue of the noise floor in churches and similar venues. Recording a harpsichord in a very ambient church in the middle of town does present its problems. Have you ever used expansion? -Jay -- x------- Jay Kadis ------- x---- Jay's Attic Studio ------x x Lecturer, Audio Engineer x Dexter Records x x CCRMA, Stanford University x http://www.offbeats.com/ x x---------- http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jay/ ------------x |
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