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#161
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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. The point is that these speakers are used by recording engineers who aren't listening for an "uh-oh" problem, as much as they are for overall naturalness and "realism". You're not going to get those things from Böse 901s. |
#162
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ...
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. ---------------------------------------- I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. B&Ws weren't mentioned, and they're used for a lot of classical monitoring. Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. |
#163
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. B&Ws weren't mentioned, and they're used for a lot of classical monitoring. I have mixed on the earlier 801s and worked with a company that used the 801s, and they were great monitors. I would be happy working with them in a room designed for them. I really do like the distant presentation of the maggies, though, which in some way compensates for my personal taste. I like to sit in the balcony and I like recordings to sound like I'm in the balcony. If I mix and mike so that i get a presentation that I like on the maggies, the customer usually is happy with it on the conventional monitors. This is a personal abberation of mine and should in no way be considered standard operating practice, and I would certainly not suggest anyone else mix this way or learn to mix this way. Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. I don't know, I learned to mix on Altec 604s, which are not exactly the most accurate things around. Overall balances (if the room is set up for them) are accurate, but there are lots of narrowband problems. Even so, mixes made on them seem to translate well onto more accurate systems. However, if I take recordings made using the 604s as reference and play them back on high quality monitors, I hear all kinds of things like squeaky podiums and scores rustling around which I never heard on the 604s. I'd much rather be able to hear that kind of thing in the original session so I can get a retake of those bars, but back then I couldn't. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#164
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ...
William Sommerwerck wrote: I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. B&Ws weren't mentioned, and they're used for a lot of classical monitoring. I have mixed on the earlier 801s and worked with a company that used the 801s, and they were great monitors. I would be happy working with them in a room designed for them. I really do like the distant presentation of the maggies, though, which in some way compensates for my personal taste. I like to sit in the balcony and I like recordings to sound like I'm in the balcony. If I mix and mike so that i get a presentation that I like on the maggies, the customer usually is happy with it on the conventional monitors. This is a personal abberation of mine and should in no way be considered standard operating practice, and I would certainly not suggest anyone else mix this way or learn to mix this way. ---------------------- This is also interesting. It's what might be called the "El Greco" perspective. As you know, El Greco (Doménikos Theotokópoulos) painted tall and narrow people. It was suggested that this was due to severe astigmatism! But such astigmatism would affect both his view of the subject, and of the painting, thereby cancelling out the effect (if he "painted what he saw"). If you like a distant perspective, and adjust the recording to sound "distant" on a distant-sounding speaker, the final recording will not sound distant. Right? I know from limited experience that recordings mixed to "sound good" on cheap speakers often do not "sound good" on first-rate speakers. |
#165
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
If you like a distant perspective, and adjust the recording to sound "distant" on a distant-sounding speaker, the final recording will not sound distant. Right? My experience is that mixes tend to end up having the same tonal balance as the loudspeaker they are mixed on. I know from limited experience that recordings mixed to "sound good" on cheap speakers often do not "sound good" on first-rate speakers. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#166
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In article ,
"William Sommerwerck" wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... 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. ---------------------------------------- I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. B&Ws weren't mentioned, and they're used for a lot of classical monitoring. Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. And Martin-Logans are great for monitoring classical and jazz because they are so transparent. I honestly believe that the most accurate speakers on the market today are the Martin-Logan CLXs. No, I don't own them, with suitable subwoofers, they will set you back about $30 grand, and even if I did have the where-with-all to buy them, my listening room is nowhere near large enough to house them. Wish I did have them. though. They sound like real music. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#167
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In article
, Jeff Henig wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: 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 I was gonna' say, I thought that was kinda' the point: have a monitoring system that's as close to some sort of standard as possible so there's less guesswork about the sound. Then it's less work to get it right if you're having to fly it to another studio, say, or make it sound right in a normal listening room. I would think that the way a lot of pop recordings are made today would make it de-riguer that studios standardize on monitor speakers, but they don't seem to. When the orchestra track is laid-down in NYC, and the vocalist is recorded in LA, I'd think that both studios would want to hear the same things in the mix. |
#168
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"Audio_Empire" wrote in message
... Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. Correct. Which is why classical recordings generally sound equally good (or equally bad) over a wide range of "good" speakers. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. And Martin-Logans are great for monitoring classical and jazz because they are so transparent. I honestly believe that the most accurate speakers on the market today are the Martin-Logan CLXs. No, I don't own them, with suitable subwoofers, they will set you back about $30 grand, and even if I did have the where-with-all to buy them, my listening room is nowhere near large enough to house them. Wish I did have them. though. They sound like real music. ------------------ The only obvious competitor would be the top QUADs. If I could just sell a screenplay, I could buy the M-Ls or QUADs. Say, do you still make those columnar speakers with the bass ports at the bottom? |
#169
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George Graves wrote:
In article , Jeff Henig wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: 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 I was gonna' say, I thought that was kinda' the point: have a monitoring system that's as close to some sort of standard as possible so there's less guesswork about the sound. Then it's less work to get it right if you're having to fly it to another studio, say, or make it sound right in a normal listening room. I would think that the way a lot of pop recordings are made today would make it de-riguer that studios standardize on monitor speakers, but they don't seem to. When the orchestra track is laid-down in NYC, and the vocalist is recorded in LA, I'd think that both studios would want to hear the same things in the mix. While there are exceptional cases where a particular room + system = a suprising outlier, in general the basic principles that lead us to acoustical remediation aimed at controlling reflections and spectrum beget reasonably workable systems. Experience counts. When moving from one room to another most will carry recordings with which they are initimately familiar, both their own work and other recordings, as a way of calibrating one's ears to a different mixing environment. My own experience has been that in many different rooms with widely varying speakers this approach has allowed me to get mixes that will play well over most systems. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#170
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Audio_Empire wrote:
Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. Monitor systems often do not sound "best". They often sound clinical, so that when one has a good mix, it sounds good even over that system. Taken to s system that is intended to sound really good the mixes often sound glorious. We also cannot ignore the role of the room as part of the playback system. The room is a big deal. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#171
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#172
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On Thursday, October 3, 2013 11:09:11 AM UTC-7, William Sommerwerck wrote:
"Audio_Empire" wrote in message ... Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. Correct. Which is why classical recordings generally sound equally good (or equally bad) over a wide range of "good" speakers. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. And Martin-Logans are great for monitoring classical and jazz because they are so transparent. I honestly believe that the most accurate speakers on the market today are the Martin-Logan CLXs. No, I don't own them, with suitable subwoofers, they will set you back about $30 grand, and even if I did have the where-with-all to buy them, my listening room is nowhere near large enough to house them. Wish I did have them. though. They sound like real music. ------------------ The only obvious competitor would be the top QUADs. If I could just sell a screenplay, I could buy the M-Ls or QUADs. Say, do you still make those columnar speakers with the bass ports at the bottom? Nah. I don't make that honkin' big "gold god" of a turntable any more either. Sorry about that. Audio_Empire is my alter-ego and sometimes my newsreader changes e-mail identities on me without my noticing. George Graves |
#173
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#174
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. As I was taught, and practiced since, monitoring during recording is primarily to detect problems in the setup, mix, etc. The monitors that best revealed such problems, such as the Altec 604s, EVs, and JBLs would not be my choice for an entertaining playback, but problems stuck out and could be quickly addressed. Playback for verification purposes was done in different environments with a variety of speakers. For example, the playback room in my last studio was about the size of a typical living room, with a few different popular brands of speakers and audio systems (that was in the '70s, when audio systems varied quite audibly). -- best regards, Neil |
#175
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Peter Larsen wrote: William Sommerwerck wrote: If you like a distant perspective, and adjust the recording to sound "distant" on a distant-sounding speaker, the final recording will not sound distant. Right? My experience is that mixes tend to end up having the same tonal balance as the loudspeaker they are mixed on. Well, the opposite tonal balance, really. If you have too much low end, the mix has too little. Or if it is not capable in the low end you don't challenge it, if it is you do. So, the FIRST requirement is that the playback system be as tonally neutral as possible. I think this is possible with a variety of different systems of different dispersions, from soffit-mounted horn monitors to planars. Yes indeed. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#176
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
"Audio_Empire" wrote in message ... Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. Correct. Which is why classical recordings generally sound equally good (or equally bad) over a wide range of "good" speakers. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. But listen to them today with better quality audio going in and perhaps a wee bit of cross-over mod as I have had done on my L100's so the midrange units stopped competing with the treble units and it is a very different story. It is an official mod btw. It was not their fault that they didn't sound well, they just did what a monitor is there to do: said "hey, this input signal is not - ahum - excellent". And yes, I slammed them back then and ended up buying a pair in 1997 and it is one of the best audio purchases I made. Because if it is good on them, it is good on everything ... And Martin-Logans are great for monitoring classical and jazz because they are so transparent. I honestly believe that the most accurate speakers on the market today are the Martin-Logan CLXs. No, I don't own them, with suitable subwoofers, they will set you back about $30 grand, and even if I did have the where-with-all to buy them, my listening room is nowhere near large enough to house them. Wish I did have them. though. They sound like real music. I have heard Martin Logans, amazingly good, but they have the standard dipole problem, you need to prevent the rear wall from reflecting what comes out of them to the rear back into the room. Did you hear the full range ESS AMT? - probably one of the rarer beasts out there, came with a current source amplifer for the LF element. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#177
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In article ,
"Peter Larsen" wrote: William Sommerwerck wrote: "Audio_Empire" wrote in message ... Though classical recordings are (I assume) still too-often multimiked, the end result is supposed to be a resemblance to the original live sound. Getting that requires a truly accurate speaker -- not the speakers that are commonly used to listen to music that has no acoustic parallel. That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. Correct. Which is why classical recordings generally sound equally good (or equally bad) over a wide range of "good" speakers. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. But listen to them today with better quality audio going in and perhaps a wee bit of cross-over mod as I have had done on my L100's so the midrange units stopped competing with the treble units and it is a very different story. It is an official mod btw. It was not their fault that they didn't sound well, they just did what a monitor is there to do: said "hey, this input signal is not - ahum - excellent". And yes, I slammed them back then and ended up buying a pair in 1997 and it is one of the best audio purchases I made. Because if it is good on them, it is good on everything ... That's an interesting perspective on the JBLs, and one I've not encountered before. You are saying that their lousy midrange was due to the crossover? Well I guess that's possible. And Martin-Logans are great for monitoring classical and jazz because they are so transparent. I honestly believe that the most accurate speakers on the market today are the Martin-Logan CLXs. No, I don't own them, with suitable subwoofers, they will set you back about $30 grand, and even if I did have the where-with-all to buy them, my listening room is nowhere near large enough to house them. Wish I did have them. though. They sound like real music. I have heard Martin Logans, amazingly good, but they have the standard dipole problem, you need to prevent the rear wall from reflecting what comes out of them to the rear back into the room. I don't really find that a problem. I used to be a Magneplanar fan, and have owned Tympani 3C's (that's the big 8-panel Maggies from the late 70's, early 80's), MG-2's, MG-3's and MG-3.6s, etc., so, I'm used to dipoles and know how to use them to best effect. What changed me to a Martin-Logan fan was the low distortion and the speed. Did you hear the full range ESS AMT? - probably one of the rarer beasts out there, came with a current source amplifer for the LF element. The Air Motion Transformer, as designed by Dr, Heil of ESS is actually a very popular high-frequency driver these days, In fact, The Martin-Logan "Motion" Series of speakers uses it. The Motion 20 and Motion 40 are both amazing sounding loudspeakers at US$1500 and US$1900 a pair, respectively. There are some nearfield monitors that use AMTs as well. Haven't heard any of them, But it's interesting how, after all these years, the AMT is gaining recognition. George Graves |
#178
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George Graves wrote:
The Air Motion Transformer, as designed by Dr, Heil of ESS is actually a very popular high-frequency driver these days, I said: the full range version, a two-way with AMT bass unit, a dipole btw. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#179
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"George Graves" wrote in message
... But it's interesting how, after all these years, the AMT is gaining recognition. Actually, it had a lot of recognition. I suspect someone got rid of its problems -- particularly the somewhat zippy sound. |
#180
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
"George Graves" wrote in message ... But it's interesting how, after all these years, the AMT is gaining recognition. Actually, it had a lot of recognition. I suspect someone got rid of its problems -- particularly the somewhat zippy sound. Dunno, listen to the SLS monitors. Top end is still kind of zippy, and the dispersion match between the top and bottom is still problematic. But the vocal sound is very, very clean. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#181
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George Graves wrote:
See, I don't mix in a studio. I use a stereo pair and SOMETIMES an accent mike or two. But since I do nothing but location recording, I obviously don't have any monitor speakers with me and I have to mix on the fly using my Koss Pro-4AAs because they are the most isolatory phones I know of. Hate their sound, but they exclude the direct ensemble sound to a great degree (I'm often in the same room as the group I'm recording) so that I can hear what it is that I'M doing. Try bringing speakers with you and take over a small room backstage or in an office somewhere. You don't get controlled acoustics, but you have a chance of being able to at least judge imaging and direct/reverberant ratios, which you can only guess at with headphones. Over the years I have used AR 4-Xes, LS 3/5as, the NHT Super Ones, and the A-20s for the job and they all had good and bad attributes but they all would allow me to make reasonable imaging judgements. It's MUCH nicer having a truck to work out of, where you have controlled and at least repeatable playback acoustics, but you can do remarkably respectable monitoring on the fly in the field. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#182
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![]() "hank alrich" wrote in message ... 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. My experience too. A good engineer can get pretty good sound these days from from most Behringer kit. It's biggest problem is it's not very rugged or very repairable. Trevor. |
#183
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![]() "hank alrich" wrote in message ... 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. Not such an issue if you are recording everything multi-track IMO. The meters tell you if your incoming signals are OK, a spectrum analyser can tell you if you have hum or noise problems, and everything else can be done later in post. Trevor. |
#184
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"Jeff Henig" wrote in message
... Is this what you're discussing? http://www.parts-express.com/pe/show...number=264-600 That type of driver, yes. I didn't know they were available commercially. |
#185
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I met Dr Heil many years ago. He claimed credit for developing the first FET,
long before Bell Labs developed the junction transistor. He also took "credit" for a talking a fellow scientist out inventing the laser! |
#186
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Is this what you're discussing?
http://www.parts-express.com/pe/show...number=264-600 One of the reviews says... "Set them up right with the correct crossovers and the right speakers, and you have a system that will rival any three-figure-priced speakers." That isn't much of a complement, because three figures gets you to only $999. |
#187
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Jeff Henig wrote:
"William Sommerwerck" wrote: Is this what you're discussing? http://www.parts-express.com/pe/show...number=264-600 One of the reviews says... "Set them up right with the correct crossovers and the right speakers, and you have a system that will rival any three-figure-priced speakers." That isn't much of a complement, because three figures gets you to only $999. LOL "It's the maths: you ain't doin' them right!" frowns I was told there would be no math. ![]() -- Les Cargill |
#188
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#189
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Neil Gould wrote:
William Sommerwerck wrote: I'm puzzled, Scott, because I would want to use the best-possible speakers when monitoring. Wow, I guess I have stirred up a hornet's nest once again. Haven't been able to look in again until now, 24 hrs later. All of this talk boils down to the differences between studio monitoring systems and home entertainment playback systems - I mean the best ones, not Joe Sixpack down the street. Legend has it that recording engineers like to use straight ahead, flat, no reflections "real man" speakers in order to best hear into the tracks. Home entertainment systems can be a completely different presentation and sound even better than the recording monitors. The classic question to be addressed is shouldn't anyone with any sense be listening on the same speakers that were used in the studio to make the recording? My deeper question to y'all is what exactly are you using those monitors for? Sounds like another silly Eickmeier question, but I would posit that I can make an entire session without any monitor speakers at all. For example, as George has explained, at the live session (concert with audience), we have to use headphones to check for a good signal and no distortion and good levels etc, but there is no way to set up a back room to check imaging on actual speakers. But who cares? You have placed your mikes IAW your vast experience, you are recording them properly, what else can you adjust even if you had a glass room? Back in the studio for mastering, are you doing a lot of compression or EQ? I'm not. Until lately, I have done all of my cutting and laying down tracks using just the computer monitors. I don't know what it really sounds like until I go out into the theater, but I know from the past that my microphones don't need any EQ, and the stereo tracks are mixed only one way unless it is a multi-miked concoction or other fancier mix. Yes yes I know that if you have some accent mikes you have to place those sounds in the right place in the mix and level them so they are not obvious, but can't most speakers tell you when it is right? I agree that you can tell imaging much better on speakers than headphones, but are the particular speakers so critical in doing that? Some of us monitor nearfield, some LEDE in a larger room, some in a more normal room such as Dave Moulton advocates with his omni speakers and reflective side walls. I agree with Scott about needing to check the final mix against all kinds of amateur consumer systems because I have been surprised by that with movie sound, but for a high quality concert mix, are the speakers so critical if we are all using some very different setups? Gary Eickmeier |
#190
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George Graves wrote:
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. Makes a world of difference crossing them over to a Velodyne F-1800. And yes, I am using the 901s all around, but also incorporating some more directional small speakers to "help" with discrete surround movie playback on the surround imaging. Also, of course, a center speaker. Do you guys use a center speaker when monitoring/mixing? Gary |
#191
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hank alrich wrote:
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. Thanks Hank. But Earth to Alrich - that was Sommerwerck who said he can't get a good recording. Gary |
#192
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Trevor wrote:
"hank alrich" wrote in message ... 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. Not such an issue if you are recording everything multi-track IMO. The meters tell you if your incoming signals are OK, a spectrum analyser can tell you if you have hum or noise problems, and everything else can be done later in post. Trevor. That would be my observation as well. I know my microphones and as long as I have connected them to the right inputs of my recorder and leveled them properly, I know I am getting good sound. Think also about the perhaps common problem that there is no sound check for my benefit beforehand at these things. I must place my microphones where past experience tells me they need to be well before show time, set levels where I think it will not overload, and just check my headphones once in a while during the concert. This is very much like when I shoot video. I do not drag a 50 inch flatscreen with me to the shoot so that I can see the images a lot better than in my viewfinder. I just rely on my experience with white balance and exposure and make any refinements in post back home. Maybe some of my attitude about sound is also from my video and film experience. In film work, you do not monitor your live sound on some big speakers in a trailer - well, maybe the big guys doing a studio remote, but crews on location just place mikes where they know they need to be and then all of the real sound production is done back in the edit studio. The dubbing stage is "where it's at" in movie sound. After all of the tracks have been built and sub-mixed, the sound mixer sits in this mini movie theater and mixes down 10 minutes worth at a time while watching picture. This would be surround, of course, where the types of speakers and their positioning to mimic most commercial theaters is all important. So I pipe my sound out to the media room now in hopes of being able to do some discrete surround for video or whatever in the future. It's a learning curve. So NOW may I please open the box and inspect my new H6? If it's all right with Alrich, of course. Right after I take these 901s off my head. Gary |
#193
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Jeff Henig wrote:
"William Sommerwerck" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... Is this what you're discussing? http://www.parts-express.com/pe/show...number=264-600 That type of driver, yes. I didn't know they were available commercially. Well, the next thing is trying to understand enough to be able to put together a set of speakers with them. I didn't see any plans involving those things. Then just buy a pair of ADAM monitors, which use ESS-style drivers. And yes, the top end IS a little spitty but that can be an advantage at times. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#194
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"Gary Eickmeier" writes:
-snips- 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. Makes a world of difference crossing them over to a Velodyne F-1800. And yes, I am using the 901s all around, but also incorporating some more directional small speakers to "help" with discrete surround movie playback on the surround imaging. Also, of course, a center speaker. Somehow, I missed this. What's your crossover point to the sub? I assume (sure hope) you're actively rolling off the LF into the 901s, and perhaps fairly steeply Next, what "helper" HF speakers are you using, and how are they placed? If you can relieve the 901s of low bass duties (and thus remove a huge IM distortion component), and then also give a little help to the top end to clarify imaging, I can see this system sounding reasonable. Still not sure it'd be my mix preference, but at least with augmentation you'd mitigate a portion of the underlying problems with any full-range driver approach to reproduction. Do you guys use a center speaker when monitoring/mixing? Depends on whether the final product will include a center channel. I don't use a center speaker (don't do any 5.1 or 7.1 work), but once someone thought I was lying when I said there was _not_ a center speaker in my room. I had to pull away some of the treatment at the front of the room to convince him otherwise -- no hidden center channel. "But that vocal sounds like it's right THERE," he said, emphatically jabbing his finger in the air between the monitors, "like I could reach out and touch her!!" (It was either Diana Krall or Shawna Colvin.) I smiled, "first time you've heard good imaging in a proper room, it would seem." To this day I still don't think he entirely believed me.... Frank Mobile Audio -- |
#195
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Audio_Empire wrote:
That brings up another point. Pop and rock OBVIOUSLY, would sound best (define that as being closest to the sound that the producers and musicians were going for when the recording was produced), played back on the same speakers that were used to produce the original studio mix. We don't really have any way of knowing what those speakers were. As far as I know, the closest the industry ever came to standardizing their monitors was in the 1960s and 1970's when JBL 4310s and 4320s (etc) were the rage. While these were loud, had big bass and tremendous high-frequency output, I certainly wouldn't want to actually listen to real acoustic music on them such as classical or even acoustic jazz. They sounded, to these ears, simply dreadful. Actually, most of the big studios were very well documented. Many of them had their own custom-designed monitoring systems but they were mostly variations on a few standard horn-loaded designs, soffit-mounted. And yes, they were almost all loud and dreadful. In the 70s, though, there was a secondary problem that, due to the obsession with isolation that resulted with the adoption of multitrack production, there was a brief period where studios were designed to be as dead as possible. In most cases, that meant dead on the top end and flabby on the bottom. Along with this studio design, the same philosophy would often extend into the control room too. Even in the 60s, though, it was not unusual to find studios with control booths that had linoleum floors and "acoustic tile" on three walls and the ceiling. This sort of thing has a tendency to result in overuse of artificial reverberation, among other problems. There are other mix translation issues too. Somewhere I have a folk rock album whose liner notes say something to the effect of "we were completely stoned when we recorded this, you should be completely stoned when you listen to it." But, I do have to say that a lot of those recordings do seem to take on a life of their own, played back in a dead room with aggressively forward horn speakers. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#196
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"Jeff Henig" wrote in message
... "William Sommerwerck" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... Is this what you're discussing? http://www.parts-express.com/pe/show...number=264-600 That type of driver, yes. I didn't know they were available commercially. Well, the next thing is trying to understand enough to be able to put together a set of speakers with them. ESS supposedly has a crossover for a full-range system, but you still have to pick the drivers. (One poster on P-E -- going against what is to me common sense -- said you should use paper drivers, rather than polypropylene, because they're "faster" and mate better with the AMT. This is unlikely.) The AMT is supposedly near-resistive, so designing a high-pass filter for it shouldn't be too difficult. As for the rest... there are books on crossover and speaker design. |
#197
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Actually, most of the big studios were very well documented.
Many of them had their own custom-designed monitoring systems but they were mostly variations on a few standard horn-loaded designs, soffit-mounted. And yes, they were almost all loud and dreadful. Many years ago, when I worked for Rupert Neve, I assisted in installing Neve automation at Atlanta's largest studio. During listening sessions, I put my fingers in my ears, and was later told that was a very rude thing to do. Well, I value my hearing more than I value appearing courteous. They had new monitor speakers, designed by a retired aerospace engineer. (It was not, unfortunately, Jon Dahlquist.) They were awful. One of their worst qualities was that, with white noise going through them, you could -- from the normal monitoring position -- hear each driver as a separate sound source! |
#198
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George Graves wrote:
Try bringing speakers with you and take over a small room backstage or in an office somewhere. That's just it. most of the time, that's not an option, so I don't even bother to try. Besides, the 'phones tell me what I need to know about levels etc. and experience means that I almost never get it wrong. Visual contact with the event and an easy route to the main pair mic stand are important factors to consider. George Graves Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#199
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"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ...
My deeper question to y'all is what exactly are you using those monitors for? Sounds like another silly Eickmeier question, but I would posit that I can make an entire session without any monitor speakers at all. It depends on what you're recording. As I usually recorded classical music with a single mic pair, Im not sure speakers would have done much good. I used Sony MDR-CD6 headphones to make sure I was reasonably close to what I wanted. It's unfortunate these 'phones were discontinued, because they did things other headphones didn't (and still don't) do: Though very small, they had an effective on-the-ear foam seal. In other words, they were supra-aural and (sort-of) circumaural at the same time! They were extremely sensitive, but could handle high power levels without distorting. The result was that I could stand behind the conductor, and /wipe out/ the direct sound of the orchestra, hearing only the 'phones. That is useful. I learned fairly quickly that if I wanted a reasonably wide image, I had to mike for a less-than-wide image through the 'phones. (Think about that before you object.) I still own a working pair -- unused. Someday I might need them again. |
#200
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"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ...
Thanks Hank. But Earth to Alrich - that was Sommerwerck who said he can't get a good recording. I never said I can't get a good recording. I made lots of "good" recordings. I just made only few recordings that sounded the way I expected them to sound. |
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