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#1
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YouTube might not have perrfect audio on it, but what a tool for searching
for music! It might be some weird niche of music or a genre that you just latched onto on the radio or somewhere, but chances are you will find it somewhere in there. And the bonus is when a particular track is done it will suggest dozends and dozends of further kinds of the same thing. Then you can look them up on Amazon and buy single tracks or full albums, CD or vinyl. But in looking up Doug Sax, I saw that picture of The Mastering Lab that he posed for, and it occurred to me that it might be really great if occasionally they would video the "making of" an album to show the studio, mixing desks, technical details like miking bands and soloists. I would love to see the miking of the Track Record or the Drum Record, or anything on Pink Floyd or even a simple jazz piano trio. I know that some on this forum have occasionally made a video of their projects and showed it to us. Anyone know of any other efforts to show us this sort of thing? Gary Eickmeier |
#2
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Gary Eckmeier:
I hear songs I like in retail stores, then look them up on YouTube. They still sound better over Tube in my car stereo than on the dinky store speakers! But YT is changing: Now that they have a pay music division(YouTube Red) that sort of video will slowly dry up on the main YT. Any music you hear on there now - original artist, original video - is probably there illegally and will soon be taken down. In five years, I'm predicting YT content will consist mostly of home videos - family, pets, birthday parties, Dad unclogging the john, etc. The way Youtube was intended. All the music will be on YouTube Red. |
#3
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On Tuesday, February 16, 2016 at 10:43:18 PM UTC-5, wrote:
Gary Eckmeier: I hear songs I like in retail stores, then look them up on YouTube. They still sound better over Tube in my car stereo than on the dinky store speakers! But YT is changing: Now that they have a pay music division(YouTube Red) that sort of video will slowly dry up on the main YT. Any music you hear on there now - original artist, original video - is probably there illegally and will soon be taken down. Google (current YT owners) has always violated copyrights, scanning books and publishing them w/o permission. I agree, YT sounds pretty good. Heck, I've purchased CDs from Amazon, due to their song snippets, clearly superior sound quality. Jack In five years, I'm predicting YT content will consist mostly of home videos - family, pets, birthday parties, Dad unclogging the john, etc. The way Youtube was intended. All the music will be on YouTube Red. |
#4
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On 17/02/2016 2:32 PM, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
YouTube might not have perrfect audio on it, but what a tool for searching for music! It might be some weird niche of music or a genre that you just latched onto on the radio or somewhere, but chances are you will find it somewhere in there. And the bonus is when a particular track is done it will suggest dozends and dozends of further kinds of the same thing. Then you can look them up on Amazon and buy single tracks or full albums, CD or vinyl. But in looking up Doug Sax, I saw that picture of The Mastering Lab that he posed for, and it occurred to me that it might be really great if occasionally they would video the "making of" an album to show the studio, mixing desks, technical details like miking bands and soloists. I would love to see the miking of the Track Record or the Drum Record, or anything on Pink Floyd or even a simple jazz piano trio. I know that some on this forum have occasionally made a video of their projects and showed it to us. Anyone know of any other efforts to show us this sort of thing? In fact there are DVD's available for the "Classic Albums" TV series including Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon as well as many others. (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0398868/) Of course most of these were made long after the albums though. However there are also many recent doco's of albums being recorded with more footage of the actual studio process. Lots of these are now used for promotion of the album these days, and regularly shown on TV. Trevor. |
#5
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On 17/02/2016 2:32 PM, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
But in looking up Doug Sax, I saw that picture of The Mastering Lab that he posed for, and it occurred to me that it might be really great if occasionally they would video the "making of" an album to show the studio, mixing desks, technical details like miking bands and soloists. I would love to see the miking of the Track Record or the Drum Record, or anything on Pink Floyd or even a simple jazz piano trio. Video is probably impossible, there being so little left other than the master tape and memories from most sessions. But, Mix magazine has had a monthly article for the past few decades in which they do exactly what you suggest, detailing the production and the production decisions that went into classic albums. Sometimes the details are right on, sometimes they are missing, sometimes they are just plain wrong. But that's what happens when you describe something that happened 30 years ago. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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On 18/02/2016 3:15 a.m., Scott Dorsey wrote:
. But, Mix magazine has had a monthly article for the past few decades in which they do exactly what you suggest, detailing the production and the production decisions that went into classic albums. Sound On Sound similarly. Sometimes the details are right on, sometimes they are missing, sometimes they are just plain wrong. But that's what happens when you describe something that happened 30 years ago. --scott Would like to think SOS at least as accurate as the memories of those they interview ;-) geoff |
#7
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geoff wrote:
On 18/02/2016 3:15 a.m., Scott Dorsey wrote: Sometimes the details are right on, sometimes they are missing, sometimes they are just plain wrong. But that's what happens when you describe something that happened 30 years ago. --scott Would like to think SOS at least as accurate as the memories of those they interview ;-) Same with mix, but that's the problem when you're doing sessions day in and day out. They all blend together. Hell, I don't remember what mike I was using on the fiddle last week let alone thirty years ago. And really, what went through your mind to select that mike and where to put it is a lot more important and useful than what mike it was. That's usually the first thing to get forgotten, though. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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