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#1
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Iīm about to do a recording with a brassband in my home studio. My
problem is to prevent distortion of my A/D interface because of the wide dynamic range of the horns. My preamp is a Allen & Heath GL2 analogue mixer, with Presonus ACP-88 compressors in each channel insert. The mixer group output is sent to the A/D interface which is a Creamware A16 Ultra, 44.1 kHz 24 bits. I donīt want the sound to be influenced by a compressor, so the ACP-88 is only used as a limiter with ratio 20:1, attack and release 1ms. But I canīt prevent the horns to overload the AD interface sometimes. What can I do to get a good leveled recording ? Can I set the ACP-88 to the lowest attack and release with the highest ratio to cut the peaks ? Should I use a compressor for reducing dynamics first and a limiter in line to cut the remainig peaks ? Thank you very much for your recommendations. Ewald |
#2
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Thank you very much for your recommendations.
Back 'em off the mic and hand gain the result. Phil Brown |
#3
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What mic(s) are you using? at what distance?
Regards, Evangelos % Evangelos Himonides IoE, University of London tel: +44 2076126599 fax: +44 2076126741 "Allas to those who never sing but die with all their music in them..." Oliver Wendell Holmes % |
#4
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![]() "Ewald Streitenberger" wrote in message om... Iīm about to do a recording with a brassband in my home studio. My problem is to prevent distortion of my A/D interface because of the wide dynamic range of the horns. My preamp is a Allen & Heath GL2 analogue mixer, with Presonus ACP-88 compressors in each channel insert. The mixer group output is sent to the A/D interface which is a Creamware A16 Ultra, 44.1 kHz 24 bits. I donīt want the sound to be influenced by a compressor, so the ACP-88 is only used as a limiter with ratio 20:1, attack and release 1ms. But I canīt prevent the horns to overload the AD interface sometimes. What can I do to get a good leveled recording ? Can I set the ACP-88 to the lowest attack and release with the highest ratio to cut the peaks ? Should I use a compressor for reducing dynamics first and a limiter in line to cut the remainig peaks ? Thank you very much for your recommendations. Ewald Hi, I think the way you are set up is fine, just reduce the level of each channel a little so even the most extreme horn blast wont overload the A/D. ( or just back them off the mics like Phil said, but there will still be a chance that someone will lunge forward an overload a channel before you can react.) Don't be afraid to record at lower overall levels. Set levels so that the loudest blast possible only registers -5 dB or so and then you can quit worrying about clipping/overs and concentrate on other things. Best of luck! -- John L Rice |
#5
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"Ewald Streitenberger" wrote in
message om Iīm about to do a recording with a brassband in my home studio. My problem is to prevent distortion of my A/D interface because of the wide dynamic range of the horns. My preamp is a Allen & Heath GL2 analogue mixer, with Presonus ACP-88 compressors in each channel insert. The mixer group output is sent to the A/D interface which is a Creamware A16 Ultra, 44.1 kHz 24 bits. I donīt want the sound to be influenced by a compressor, so the ACP-88 is only used as a limiter with ratio 20:1, attack and release 1ms. But I canīt prevent the horns to overload the AD interface sometimes. No gain control that you can turn down, anyplace? I see about six of them in the GL2 signal path of one mic on this pictu http://www.soundart.com/gl2.html http://www.presonus.com/pdf/acp88_manual.pdf shows that there is one more gain control per channel. What can I do to get a good leveled recording ? Find appropriate gain control, rotate counterclockwise in increments for desired results. |
#6
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#7
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#8
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I use Electovoice RE20, Schoeps CMC5 and Neumann KM184 mics about 5
inches close to tbe instrumentīs bell, to get a better signal separation, because the recording rooms are small. Ewald "Evangelos Himonides" wrote in message roups.com... What mic(s) are you using? at what distance? Regards, Evangelos % Evangelos Himonides IoE, University of London tel: +44 2076126599 fax: +44 2076126741 "Allas to those who never sing but die with all their music in them..." Oliver Wendell Holmes % |
#9
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Hm, are you sure thar it's distortion at the A/D point? Could it be
'popping' caused by the trombone or trumpet? I would try to 'break-it down' a little. Do you have the same problem with all 3 mics? Try them one by one, one instrument (or kind of instrument) at a time. Have them play the 'loud' or 'punchy' passage and see what's happening. Try a pop-shield as well (you never know). Good luck, Evangelos |
#10
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quote: I don=B4t want the sound to be
influenced by a compressor that's the $3000 question: Cranesong STC-8. |
#11
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#12
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So the main opinion here is:
1) No need to reduce dynamics, simply reduce the gain and/or back the horns off the mics. 2) Thereīs no need to record the signal with a high level (hope you understand my english) as you usually did with a analogue tape recorder. So thereīs another question for me: Creamware writes in the A/D converterīs manual: "You HAVE to care about high leveling". Is this nonsense ? And as I wrote earlier, Iīm not able to keep a big distance between the horns, because the room is actually too small and therefore I have to put the mics very close to the horn, not directly īlookingī into the bell. Thank you for any opinions on that Ewald |
#13
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![]() "Ewald Streitenberger" wrote in message om... So the main opinion here is: 1) No need to reduce dynamics, simply reduce the gain and/or back the horns off the mics. 2) Thereīs no need to record the signal with a high level (hope you understand my english) as you usually did with a analogue tape recorder. I would agree with that... So thereīs another question for me: Creamware writes in the A/D converterīs manual: "You HAVE to care about high leveling". Is this nonsense ? I believe that it is. If they are making this statement in a generic fashion, as in it's important to *everything* you record, then it's wrong, in my opinion. If they are specific about certain sources, then it's at least worth debating. And as I wrote earlier, Iīm not able to keep a big distance between the horns, because the room is actually too small and therefore I have to put the mics very close to the horn, not directly īlookingī into the bell. Lower the gain and process after the fact if you need to... once you see how the part is going to fit into the mix. Otherwise, a hardware peak limiter in the signal path before the DAW might help a little. There are not many compressors that attack fast enough to stop the transients found in most horns. -- David Morgan (MAMS) http://www.m-a-m-s DOT com Morgan Audio Media Service Dallas, Texas (214) 662-9901 _______________________________________ http://www.artisan-recordingstudio.com |
#14
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Yes, itīs definitely digital distortion.
I can see and hear it in the tracks and it happens with all mics. Regards Ewald "Evangelos Himonides" wrote in message roups.com... Hm, are you sure thar it's distortion at the A/D point? Could it be 'popping' caused by the trombone or trumpet? I would try to 'break-it down' a little. Do you have the same problem with all 3 mics? Try them one by one, one instrument (or kind of instrument) at a time. Have them play the 'loud' or 'punchy' passage and see what's happening. Try a pop-shield as well (you never know). Good luck, Evangelos |
#15
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this may not be germaine to the topic but it is not off topic
The two parts of the article "The Art of Recording The Big Band" by Robert Auld are very interesting and instructional reading. http://www.auldworks.com/index.htm dale |
#16
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![]() Ewald Streitenberger wrote: So the main opinion here is: 1) No need to reduce dynamics, simply reduce the gain and/or back the horns off the mics. 2) There=B4s no need to record the signal with a high level (hope you understand my english) as you usually did with a analogue tape recorder. So there=B4s another question for me: Creamware writes in the A/D converter=B4s manual: "You HAVE to care about high leveling". Is this nonsense ? And as I wrote earlier, I=B4m not able to keep a big distance between the horns, because the room is actually too small and therefore I have to put the mics very close to the horn, not directly =B4looking=B4 into the bell. Thank you for any opinions on that Ewald With 24 bits you have about 144 dB dynamic range. Yep just turn it down. You can give up a few dB at the top end, you still have plenty to work with. Mark |
#17
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![]() "Ewald Streitenberger" wrote in message om... Yes, itīs definitely digital distortion. I can see and hear it in the tracks and it happens with all mics. Are you absolutely certyain that the rest of your gain structure is set up to accomodate the source? Could the distortion be in the mic pres? With that much analogue gear in the path, there's a good chance something else is going on. How can you be *absolutely certain* that the distortion is coming from the digital side of the equation? Have you eliminated _everything_ analogue? DM |
#18
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The distortion appears also with the EV RE20 which is a dynamic
microphone, and it distorts always when the clip LED of the A/D interface flashes. But I will keep an eye on this. Thanks for your help. "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" wrote in message How can you be *absolutely certain* that the distortion is coming from the digital side of the equation? Have you eliminated _everything_ analogue? DM |
#19
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#20
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"Ewald Streitenberger" wrote in
message om The distortion appears also with the EV RE20 which is a dynamic microphone, and it distorts always when the clip LED of the A/D interface flashes. So how hard is it to turn the gain down to avoid this? |
#21
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#22
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Ewald Streitenberger wrote:
Yes, itīs definitely digital distortion. I can see and hear it in the tracks and it happens with all mics. So turn it down. That's why you have a volume control on the preamp. Horns have a very spiky waveform.... the average level is much lower than the peak level. This was always a problem in the analogue world because you couldn't believe your VU meters and had to record at much lower levels than the meters indicated. Thank God we don't have to deal with that any more. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#23
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Ewald Streitenberger wrote:
The distortion appears also with the EV RE20 which is a dynamic microphone, and it distorts always when the clip LED of the A/D interface flashes. Yes, it certainly would. That's why that LED is there... to warn you that you've gone WAY out of the safe range and are into distortion. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#24
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![]() Ewald Streitenberger wrote: I=B4m about to do a recording with a brassband in my home studio. My problem is to prevent distortion of my A/D interface because of the wide dynamic range of the horns. My preamp is a Allen & Heath GL2 analogue mixer, with Presonus ACP-88 compressors in each channel insert. The mixer group output is sent to the A/D interface which is a Creamware A16 Ultra, 44.1 kHz 24 bits. I don=B4t want the sound to be influenced by a compressor, so the ACP-88 is only used as a limiter with ratio 20:1, attack and release 1ms. But I can=B4t prevent the horns to overload the AD interface sometimes. What can I do to get a good leveled recording ? Can I set the ACP-88 to the lowest attack and release with the highest ratio to cut the peaks ? Should I use a compressor for reducing dynamics first and a limiter in line to cut the remainig peaks ? Thank you very much for your recommendations. Ewald You're on the right track. Lower your threshold and you'll wipe out the peaks and your waveform will be at the perfect level. The only problem is when you play it back it won't sound like the instrument you recorded. Depending on the music you may like the sound, but most people don't like the sound of limiting. Turn the level down and tell the player to give a leveled performance. He may even want to adjust his phrasing when he understands what needs to happen with his part later in the mix. I assuing that you want a leveled perfromace for musical reasons as opposed to taking something that is intended to have a dynamic range and levelling it for academic reasons. |
#25
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On 4 Apr 2005 13:07:15 -0700, "Mike Caffrey"
wrote: Turn the level down and tell the player to give a leveled performance. He may even want to adjust his phrasing when he understands what needs to happen with his part later in the mix. Oh dear! You aren't asking the horns to record their parts in isolation, are you? No wonder we have to spend so much trouble fixing in the mix what should (and would) have been naturally done by the players in a live interactive musical situation. |
#26
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On 4/4/05 12:22 PM, in article , "Scott Dorsey"
wrote: Horns have a very spiky waveform.... the average level is much lower than the peak level. This was always a problem in the analogue world because you couldn't believe your VU meters and had to record at much lower levels than the meters indicated. Thank God we don't have to deal with that any more. --scott I LIKE dealing with that... |
#27
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SSJVCmag wrote:
On 4/4/05 12:22 PM, in article , "Scott Dorsey" wrote: Horns have a very spiky waveform.... the average level is much lower than the peak level. This was always a problem in the analogue world because you couldn't believe your VU meters and had to record at much lower levels than the meters indicated. Thank God we don't have to deal with that any more. I LIKE dealing with that... I don't, but I got around it by switching the meters on the ATR-100 to peak-reading instead of VU.... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#28
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![]() Laurence Payne wrote: On 4 Apr 2005 13:07:15 -0700, "Mike Caffrey" wrote: Turn the level down and tell the player to give a leveled performance. He may even want to adjust his phrasing when he understands what needs to happen with his part later in the mix. Oh dear! You aren't asking the horns to record their parts in isolation, are you? No wonder we have to spend so much trouble fixing in the mix what should (and would) have been naturally done by the players in a live interactive musical situation. I thought it was just one player. My point is, if you have them play with the apropriate dynamics, then you wont have to worry about compression for leveling purposes. I've found that will lead to tracks that are really easy to mix. Do you find yourself spending a lot of time fixing your horn tracks? |
#29
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I thought it was just one player.
op : "I'm about to do a recording with a brassband in my home studio..." My point is, if you have them play with the apropriate dynamics, then you wont have to worry about compression for leveling purposes. I've found that will lead to tracks that are really easy to mix. Do you find yourself spending a lot of time fixing your horn tracks? Yup. Far too much emphasis on turd-polishing these days. Play the music right in the first place. |
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