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#1
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Imagine the hapless videographer trying to tape a band during a dance.
The sound needs to be good because it was the band that hired us for a demo of what they can do. The visual problems are obvious, needing to see above the heads of the dancers so I can see the band on stage. Less obvious is the lighting, which there was little of, and it was mostly backlighing. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. So that is out, and I place the recorder back further where it is safe, but that ends up in the same spot as the video camera, which is high up on a tripod about 40 ft back. No way to hang the recorder from the ceiling, without a 30 ft stepladder (and a volunteer). Only other aid will be the sound board recorder, Tascam DR-07 with line input set to AGC. HOWEVER, this concept depends heavily on the sound mixer doing his thing right so that I get at least an approximation of all of the instruments. On first testing, it seems that I am missing some of them, because they have their own amp and speaker right next to them and don't need to go into the board. I mention to the sound guy (just one of the musicians) that the kick drum is WHACKing its authority a little too loudly, and that is all I am hearing right now. He knocks it down a little. A listener guy stands out in front of the speakers to tell the band how they sound, and he says fine, but again it is hard to tell where the various sounds are coming from. Some are from the speaker system and some are not. Ah well, I have my camera sound from out front if nothing else works. So back in the studio I download all tracks, the video camera track, the Zoom, and the sound board. I sync them up and give a listen to who is doing what to who. The video sound is all floompy and not real distinct. The sound board is thin but has most of the instruments and does pick up the two vocalists very distinctly, so all is not lost. I adjust the gains to the various tracks and balance the vocalists with the bass of the video track and it seems to come together on my modest video monitoring speakers to a point where I won't be embarrassed to call the client in for a look see. The lack of control in a live situation is very frustrating. Both the lighting and the sound, the obvious important elements in a VIDEO of a BAND performing were completely out of my intimate control to the point that I might reconsider taking on such a thing in the future without some sort of pre-arrangement. You have any similar tales? Live amplified band recording has to be the most difficult job anywhere. Gary Eickmeier |
#2
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On 9/2/2013 11:16 AM, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
You have any similar tales? Live amplified band recording has to be the most difficult job anywhere. You really need to make an independent recording mix, and you will almost certainly need to put up some mics on the amplifiers and maybe a DI for the bass that don't get used in the house or monitors. One of those new fangled digity-tall consoles mated with a computer is ideal for this as long as you have enough channels to cover both the house engineer's mics and your auxiliary mics. You can record everything that comes out of a mic on its own track and the mix it when you get home. Next best is to do a live mix (which will include your auxiliary mics) using auxiliary sends to the recorder. Unless you have stereo aux sends (not very common in budget priced analog mixers, but often availabie in cheap digital mixers if you push the right buttons) you'll have to settle for a mono mix, but there's no harm in that. Or you can just hang a stereo mic where you get a good room sound and pray. At least you recognized the shortcomings, but getting around them isn't always simple or cheap. -- For a good time, call http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com |
#3
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Gary Eickmeier wrote:
The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. So that is out, and I place the recorder back further where it is safe, but that ends up in the same spot as the video camera, which is high up on a tripod about 40 ft back. Set the H2 to a conservative fixed gain setting, and use the built in limiter. You could also try hanging the H2 above the stage, if you can find a sensible spot during your sound check. You have any similar tales? Live amplified band recording has to be the most difficult job anywhere. Which I why I use a portable multitrack recorder and mic everything up myself, using, if permitted, splitters on the vocal mics. A Zoom R24 will give you 8 mic capable tracks with 6 phantom power points, and can be slaved to another R24 or R16 to give 16 available tracks. The preamps aren't the best, but the results are surprisingly good on the choir and 60s band that I've used it on so far. Quality or convenience? -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#4
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John Williamson wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. So that is out, and I place the recorder back further where it is safe, but that ends up in the same spot as the video camera, which is high up on a tripod about 40 ft back. Set the H2 to a conservative fixed gain setting, and use the built in limiter. You could also try hanging the H2 above the stage, if you can find a sensible spot during your sound check. You have any similar tales? Live amplified band recording has to be the most difficult job anywhere. Which I why I use a portable multitrack recorder and mic everything up myself, using, if permitted, splitters on the vocal mics. A Zoom R24 will give you 8 mic capable tracks with 6 phantom power points, and can be slaved to another R24 or R16 to give 16 available tracks. The preamps aren't the best, but the results are surprisingly good on the choir and 60s band that I've used it on so far. Quality or convenience? Thanks to you both. I know that if it were a sound recording gig the professional way would be to bring my own multi-mikes and see if I can place them without getting in the way if they still need their own amplified system. But this was just a video shoot and I didn't want to get in their way or interfere when they were setting up. I do have a Zoom R16 that can do 8 channels at once, two of them powered. I have but three good microphones, and a few cheap Sony lavalier mikes that would work with a job like this. If I could get up there and hang a stereo pair, that would be lovely, but I don't know how they do it without a fire department lift. I wonder if you could use whatever mikes they do have set up for their sound, then add as many of your own to that going to your own recorder along with the board mix - if you had enough line, wouldn't get in the way, and knew where everyone was going to stand! This was certainly not a high enough paying job for all that, but I suppose the really correct way would be to have a real recording engineer with proper equipment and knowledge work along with you. I would also bring a couple of spot lights that I could supplement the available light with, if I could concentrate on the video side. For this job I used the main camera on tripod catching everything that happened, plus a roving camera that could catch angles and close-ups. And some fancy moving camera stuff. Gary Eickmeier |
#5
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On Monday, September 2, 2013 10:16:03 AM UTC-5, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
You have any similar tales? Live amplified band recording has to be the most difficult job anywhere. It is difficult, for many of the reasons you discovered in your baptism by fire. If it's any comfort, live opera is worse, because you have to place your mics out of sight of the audience. You said, "But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio." That means you haven't been around the block; you've just walked in front of a few buildings. You're discovering a whole 'nother level of complexity. And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. Peace, Paul |
#6
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![]() And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. I will add this... don't even try to do a live mix for recording unless you have high isolation head phones or a separated room. Your best bet is to multi-track as many separate tracks as you can manage and mix them back home. Make sure you get good recordings of the vocals and one or two tracks for audience room sound comes in handy too. Mark |
#7
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PStamler wrote:
On Monday, September 2, 2013 10:16:03 AM UTC-5, Gary Eickmeier wrote: You said, "But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio." Tongue in cheek. That means you haven't been around the block; you've just walked in front of a few buildings. You're discovering a whole 'nother level of complexity. Yes! And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. Peace, Paul Wel-l-l-l - my excuse is that there is hardly any sound check, I can't depend on their levels staying the same, and when doing a video shoot I can't monitor the gain on my remote recorders. The AGC on the Zoom and also on the Tascam are very gentle on their action, and never record too high, usually a little lower than expected. For my jobs, better to get acceptable, workable audio than leave it to chance. I HAVE obtained some excellent recordings this way. Except when some moron seated near the recorder does some POP clapping instead of normal applause. Gary Eickmeier |
#8
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On Monday, September 2, 2013 9:43:03 PM UTC-5, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
PStamler wrote: On Monday, September 2, 2013 10:16:03 AM UTC-5, Gary Eickmeier wrote: You said, "But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio." Tongue in cheek. That means you haven't been around the block; you've just walked in front of a few buildings. You're discovering a whole 'nother level of complexity. Yes! And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. Peace, Paul Wel-l-l-l - my excuse is that there is hardly any sound check, I can't depend on their levels staying the same, and when doing a video shoot I can't monitor the gain on my remote recorders. As another poster remarked, this gig needs 2 people -- one on camera, one recording audio onto multitrack (without AGC) to mix down later. Peace, Paul |
#9
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PStamler wrote:
And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. +1. The H2 has a very versatile system for setting levels, ranging from simple preset gain adjustment to AGC to a nice limiter/ compressor. Just don't try adjusting or moving it while it's recording anything that's wanted as they are *very* sensitive to contact and stand-borne noise. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#10
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On 9/2/2013 3:54 PM, Gary Eickmeier wrote:
I wonder if you could use whatever mikes they do have set up for their sound, then add as many of your own to that going to your own recorder along with the board mix - if you had enough line, wouldn't get in the way, and knew where everyone was going to stand! Sure. This is done all the time. The best way to do this is to split the mics at the stage and do a separate mix from the PA. But if you can get a reasonable mix from the PA that's missing a few things, you can add that in to a stereo mix through a mixer of your own. Yes, it's always better to have enough money in the budget to pay for whatever you need, whether it's more gear or a more experienced recordist. -- For a good time, call http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com |
#11
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John Williamson wrote:
PStamler wrote: And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. +1. The H2 has a very versatile system for setting levels, ranging from simple preset gain adjustment to AGC to a nice limiter/ compressor. Just don't try adjusting or moving it while it's recording anything that's wanted as they are *very* sensitive to contact and stand-borne noise. You said an earful! I put one on the stage one fine time, on its mike stand, and the footfalls and thumping around were horrendous! I couldn't believe it. No more on the same stage as the performers! Gary Eickmeier |
#12
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Gary Eickmeier wrote:
Imagine the hapless videographer trying to tape a band during a dance. Well, the crazy thing turned out great! The board feed was what saved it. Actually, if you think about it, that should be the best source for a live recording. Their mikes that they are playing to are the first source of the sound that they want us to hear. Of course, this applies only if they are feeding all instruments to the board. And I don't think it was a stereo mix - they have neither the time nor the patience for that. What we need to do is mike the event for them, and then let them have the feed for their PA system, not the other way around. That way we could do a multichannel recording or a live mix in stereo. I don't have a mixer big enough, nor enough mikes, but just thinking the job through. Gary Eickmeier |
#13
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On Fri, 06 Sep 2013 03:06:14 +0100, Gary Eickmeier
wrote: Gary Eickmeier wrote: Imagine the hapless videographer trying to tape a band during a dance. Well, the crazy thing turned out great! The board feed was what saved it. In my experience, a stereo mix from the mixing desk and a pair of well sited mics will give surprisingly good results. You would need the mics anyway to give you the audience applause and ambience between songs but they also pick up anything that was too loud to go through the PA during the songs too. One other compromise if you are limited to a certain number of tracks is to use sub-groups on the mixing desk and record each subgroup on a separate track. James. -- http://www.jrpmusic.net |
#14
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Gary Eickmeier wrote:
The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. That's what you get for setting levels where you did. In 24 bit mode there is substantial headroom at hand. You should never be triggering that AGC circuit, and in fact, it should be disabled in preference settings. AGC is post conversion. Hence, excessive SPL + unfortunately high input sensitivity settings = compressed garbage. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. Hype, brother. You are a beginner, filled with theoretical concepts, outputting long posts about what went wrong, again. Accept this and learning begins. The biggest guru of all is humility. -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#15
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Jeff Henig wrote:
This: hank alrich wrote: The biggest guru of all is humility. +1 One of the most profound statements you've ever made--and you've made a few profound ones. Yes, well, he could exercise a little of his own advice by reading the whole thread and learning about sarcasm. The main giveaway in my paragraph that he is taking me to task on is the "er." That is the equivalent of "LOL," which is an indication of a tongue in cheek statement. I do NOT lack humility - in fact, I am the most humble person on the planet. Gary Eickmeier |
#16
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Jeff Henig wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote: I do NOT lack humility - in fact, I am the most humble person on the planet. Gary Eickmeier LOL Nice. He GOT it! He GOT it... Didn't he? Gary |
#17
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On Saturday, September 7, 2013 7:43:22 PM UTC-5, Jeff Henig wrote:
One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. Pretty sure he was jabbing at himself and having a giggle at his own expense. Most Bible scholars believe that it was not written by Moses, but by people living after his time and edited together by a single person, usually called the "redactor". There are disagreements about which parts were written by whom, and who the redactor was. Check out the book "Who Wrote the Bible?" It's a good read. The "most humble man" line is still a good joke. Peace, Paul |
#18
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On Sat, 7 Sep 2013 19:51:30 -0700 (PDT), PStamler
wrote: On Saturday, September 7, 2013 7:43:22 PM UTC-5, Jeff Henig wrote: One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. Pretty sure he was jabbing at himself and having a giggle at his own expense. Most Bible scholars believe that it was not written by Moses, but by people living after his time and edited together by a single person, usually called the "redactor". There are disagreements about which parts were written by whom, and who the redactor was. Check out the book "Who Wrote the Bible?" It's a good read. The "most humble man" line is still a good joke. It's a bit like learned sages arguing over what colour dresses fairies wear. Amusing but more revealing of them than the subject. d |
#19
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![]() "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Trevor. |
#20
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On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote:
"Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. d |
#21
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Don Pearce wrote:
On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Gary Eickmeier |
#22
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On Sunday, September 8, 2013 2:20:09 PM UTC-5, Jeff Henig wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Gary Eickmeier That's actually my bad. I forgot that nothing that casually references any fragment of religion can be mentioned in this group without it becoming a landing ramp for atheist soapboxes. Mine wasn't meant as an atheist soapbox. I was raised an atheist, but underwent a conversion experience and now consider myself an agnostic. Peace, Paul |
#23
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On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 19:20:09 +0000 (UTC), Jeff Henig
wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Gary Eickmeier That's actually my bad. I forgot that nothing that casually references any fragment of religion can be mentioned in this group without it becoming a landing ramp for atheist soapboxes. I mean, seriously, people. Give it a rest. It was meant to be funny. It wasn't meant to be a friggin' scholarly talking point. Yes, we understand. Only people who believe in the supernatural are permitted to voice their views here. Anyone else is on a soapbox. We get it. d |
#24
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"Gary Eickmeier" wrote:
This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. There is a bluegrass song about this! That's actually my bad. I forgot that nothing that casually references any fragment of religion can be mentioned in this group without it becoming a landing ramp for atheist soapboxes. Or even worse, clawhammer banjo players. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#25
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Jeff Henig wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Gary Eickmeier That's actually my bad. I forgot that nothing that casually references any fragment of religion can be mentioned in this group without it becoming a landing ramp for atheist soapboxes. I mean, seriously, people. Give it a rest. It was meant to be funny. It wasn't meant to be a friggin' scholarly talking point. Ronald Reagan: "Excuse me Mr. Speaker but I PAID for this microphone!" Gary Eickmeier: "Excuse me Mr. Henig, but this is MY thread!" Lighten up. G |
#26
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PStamler wrote:
On Sunday, September 8, 2013 2:20:09 PM UTC-5, Jeff Henig wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 8 Sep 2013 17:23:56 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... One of the funnier moments I ever had in Bible class was reading in Exodus that Moses was the most humble man who ever lived. What made it so funny was that Moses is the author of that book. The Bible was not written by it's characters. Hell we don't know how many of them even existed, let alone whether they could read or write! Assume none of them as a good starting point. Add them in as you find actual evidence. So far we have a few Romans and the odd Egyptian. This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Gary Eickmeier That's actually my bad. I forgot that nothing that casually references any fragment of religion can be mentioned in this group without it becoming a landing ramp for atheist soapboxes. Mine wasn't meant as an atheist soapbox. I was raised an atheist, but underwent a conversion experience and now consider myself an agnostic. Peace, Paul Perhaps you'll be reincarnated and come back as a mild Anglican :-) |
#27
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![]() "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Do you count the snake? Trevor. |
#28
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![]() "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... The truly funny thing here is that some of those commenting on this would have left it alone if I made a reference to, say Hitchhikers' Guide To The Universe, and said Mr. Adams made a funny statement. No, I would have said it was "Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy", much funnier than the Bible and possibly more factual :-) Trevor. |
#29
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![]() "Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... "Trevor" wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Do you count the snake? You do if you're not going wireless. Nah, use 6 cats (cat 6) instead :-) Trevor. |
#30
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Trevor wrote:
"Jeff Henig" wrote in message ... "Trevor" wrote: "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Do you count the snake? You do if you're not going wireless. Nah, use 6 cats (cat 6) instead :-) Trevor. Anyway, the client liked the video but he was more concerned about his band's performance than the lighting or sound. Some of them were a little off.... Gary Eickmeier |
#31
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![]() "hank alrich" wrote in message ... Gary Eickmeier wrote: The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. That's what you get for setting levels where you did. In 24 bit mode there is substantial headroom at hand. You should never be triggering that AGC circuit, and in fact, it should be disabled in preference settings. AGC is post conversion. Hence, excessive SPL + unfortunately high input sensitivity settings = compressed garbage. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. Hype, brother. You are a beginner, filled with theoretical concepts, outputting long posts about what went wrong, again. Accept this and learning begins. The biggest guru of all is humility. Well said. I admit it, I've been lectured more than once about out-smarting myself. ;-) Ideally theory and practice are taught together in synch. Often way too much theory gets learned first. |
#32
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As my Spiritual Master said, "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is."
Peace, Paul |
#33
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n indication of a tongue in cheek statement.
I do NOT lack humility - in fact, I am the most humble person on the planet. Gary Eickmeier I'm so humble I have a room just to hold the humble awards I've been given. I always take guests to that room first to impress them. Tobiah |
#34
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Tobiah wrote:
n indication of a tongue in cheek statement. I do NOT lack humility - in fact, I am the most humble person on the planet. Gary Eickmeier I'm so humble I have a room just to hold the humble awards I've been given. I always take guests to that room first to impress them. Ah, so you too have a downstairs toilet. :-) (That's a bathroom if you're American.) Yes, I know it's an old joke.... -- Tciao for Now! John. |
#35
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"hank alrich" wrote in message ... Gary Eickmeier wrote: The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. That's what you get for setting levels where you did. In 24 bit mode there is substantial headroom at hand. You should never be triggering that AGC circuit, and in fact, it should be disabled in preference settings. AGC is post conversion. Hence, excessive SPL + unfortunately high input sensitivity settings = compressed garbage. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. Hype, brother. You are a beginner, filled with theoretical concepts, outputting long posts about what went wrong, again. Accept this and learning begins. The biggest guru of all is humility. Well said. I admit it, I've been lectured more than once about out-smarting myself. ;-) Ideally theory and practice are taught together in synch. Often way too much theory gets learned first. Hi Arn - if you will read the whole thread, you might see that it was said in jest. Gary |
#36
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![]() "Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "hank alrich" wrote in message ... Gary Eickmeier wrote: The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. That's what you get for setting levels where you did. In 24 bit mode there is substantial headroom at hand. You should never be triggering that AGC circuit, and in fact, it should be disabled in preference settings. AGC is post conversion. Hence, excessive SPL + unfortunately high input sensitivity settings = compressed garbage. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. Hype, brother. You are a beginner, filled with theoretical concepts, outputting long posts about what went wrong, again. Accept this and learning begins. The biggest guru of all is humility. Well said. I admit it, I've been lectured more than once about out-smarting myself. ;-) Ideally theory and practice are taught together in synch. Often way too much theory gets learned first. Hi Arn - if you will read the whole thread, you might see that it was said in jest. In humor there is often truth, and you can quote me about that! ;-) |
#37
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "hank alrich" wrote in message ... Gary Eickmeier wrote: The first problem is my main concept of placing my Zoom H2n up front to get the good, close sound that I am used to goes down the drain when the big stage monitors and PA speakers are placed right near where I would like to be. In my experience what this does is cause the AGC to go nuts from the bass frequencies because all of the speakers are facing away from the recorder, and the bass is most of what it hears, and all I get is whump whump whump. That's what you get for setting levels where you did. In 24 bit mode there is substantial headroom at hand. You should never be triggering that AGC circuit, and in fact, it should be disabled in preference settings. AGC is post conversion. Hence, excessive SPL + unfortunately high input sensitivity settings = compressed garbage. But the sound - er, good thing they hired me, because I KNOW sound, and have recorded a lot of bands. Well, maybe not amplified bands, but I have been around the block recording audio. Hype, brother. You are a beginner, filled with theoretical concepts, outputting long posts about what went wrong, again. Accept this and learning begins. The biggest guru of all is humility. Well said. I admit it, I've been lectured more than once about out-smarting myself. ;-) Ideally theory and practice are taught together in synch. Often way too much theory gets learned first. Hi Arn - if you will read the whole thread, you might see that it was said in jest. In humor there is often truth, and you can quote me about that! ;-) +1 ! -- shut up and play your guitar * HankAlrich.Com HankandShaidriMusic.Com YouTube.Com/WalkinayMusic |
#38
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Gary Eickmeier wrote:
John Williamson wrote: PStamler wrote: And, by the way, if you're recording things with the AGC turned on, you're going to get crappy recordings. Every time. +1. The H2 has a very versatile system for setting levels, ranging from simple preset gain adjustment to AGC to a nice limiter/ compressor. Just don't try adjusting or moving it while it's recording anything that's wanted as they are *very* sensitive to contact and stand-borne noise. You said an earful! I put one on the stage one fine time, on its mike stand, and the footfalls and thumping around were horrendous! I couldn't believe it. No more on the same stage as the performers! Wrong contraption then. Also fixing thumps in post is simple, as long as it reminds of anything that could happen on vinyl a vinyl-treatment plugin in fix single click mode does wonders. Gary Eickmeier Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#39
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Gary Eickmeier wrote:
Gary Eickmeier wrote: Imagine the hapless videographer trying to tape a band during a dance. Well, the crazy thing turned out great! The board feed was what saved it. Actually, if you think about it, that should be the best source for a live recording. No, the above stage mikes is. Their mikes that they are playing to are the first source of the sound that they want us to hear. Of course, this applies only if they are feeding all instruments to the board. And I don't think it was a stereo mix - they have neither the time nor the patience for that. It doesn't take time to turn pan pots, it is about a stable image in the room, but a wee bit of stereo can be done. What we need to do is mike the event for them, No. The audience pays for the show and you do NOT want to be responsible for causing feedback. and then let them have the feed for their PA system, not the other way around. No, here is why: there will still be a show without a recording, but there will not be a recording without a show. That way we could do a multichannel recording or a live mix in stereo. Splitbox solves that. About now I reckon it has one CAT5E for FOH, one for monitorland and one for you, in the old days it was a lot of iron. No matter how, galvanic separation of systems is generally preferable. The best sounding is a passive split, but not usbable for a 3 way splitting, I reckon some still like the iron concept over the active concepts (analog or digital) due to its vices being more pleasing to the ear. I don't have a mixer big enough, nor enough mikes, but just thinking the job through. You need to be a skilled PA operator to mic up a live stage for PA. Gary Eickmeier Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#40
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Trevor wrote:
"Gary Eickmeier" wrote in message ... This could turn into a long sidebar, but I just want to know how many reporters were there when Adam and Eve were created. Do you count the snake? Of course, there wouldn't be a show without it. Trevor. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
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