T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1158.1 | get a compressor | DISSRV::CROWLEY | ere lies David St. 'ubbins, and why not! | Tue Jan 19 1988 12:46 | 10 |
|
The best way to avoid tape saturation and still get a decent recording
level is to get a compressor. Its one of the basic necessities
of life in multitrack recording. And you'll constantly find new
uses for one too.
ralph
|
1158.2 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Tue Jan 19 1988 12:50 | 11 |
| Maybe the singer is just singing too loud? No really. I've seen singers
on TV who practically swallow the microphone; they should be 6 inches to
one foot away. Then the singers have to hear themselves in headphones,
balanced against the rest of what is going on. They will unconsciously
change the level at which they sing according to what they hear, so set
the mix first without them able to hear it, then adjust their monitor level.
If they hear the level change, THEY will change too, in the opposite direction.
Compressors and limiters are often used on mic inputs to protect against
overloads, but they are really making up for poor control on the part of
the vocalist.
|
1158.3 | I'll try that. | MANANA::RUDNICK | | Tue Jan 19 1988 13:16 | 8 |
|
Hmmmm... I'll give that a shot Paul. I have been close to the mike
and have been setting the levels with the headphones on. Hmmm...
Thanks,
Ben.
|
1158.4 | The needles are just a reference standard | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Jan 19 1988 13:16 | 24 |
| One thing that occurs to me is that you shouldn't necessarily
"believe" the needles. One of the first things I did when I got
my 4-track was to make the following experiment.
I cranked up fairly level (dynamicly speaking) sequence on my ESQ-1
and had it go into one track. On another track I had a live mic.
I had the sequence repeat indefinitely but after each iteration
I would raise the volume one notch on the recorders meters and recite
the meter reading into the mic so I could hear what level it was
recorded at on playback. (It turns out that the meters on my unit
do NOT display the same data on playback as they did during record.)
I found that I could 'overdrive' the meters well above the 0db
standard.
I later talked with a recording engineer who sorta said that the
optimal levels are a function of the machine itself, the calibration of
the machine, and the grade of tape used. It was also satisfying
when he pointed out that the grade of tape I was using recommended
using a higher level right on the packaging (which of course, I
had never read).
db
|
1158.5 | but the ears know for sure... | MANANA::RUDNICK | | Tue Jan 19 1988 13:27 | 2 |
| re: -1 I don't take the meters as gospel but they are a good
guide and in the same trick the ears say "wow... thats bad!".
|
1158.6 | Try an SM10 or 12 | SRFSUP::MORRIS | Kill Tipper Gore | Tue Jan 19 1988 18:37 | 11 |
|
To try to keep my pathetic vocals within th emeters range, I wen
t ahead and bought a Shure SM10...the headset mic. This way I'm
not eating the mic, and I'm always the same distance away, so it
has taught me to try to sing the same volume for most every song.
It is also great live....the only drawback is that there is no cough
button, or any ohter way to keep your heavy breathing off the mix
other than to move the arm.
Ashley
|
1158.7 | | SALSA::MOELLER | | Tue Jan 19 1988 19:05 | 25 |
| One more vote for, I mean against, 'eating' the mic.. the famed
(all together now) Fletcher-Munson 'proximity' effect.. bass goes
WAY up the closer you get.. I considered fastening a sharpened pencil
to the microphone to get one vocalist to back off..
Or is the Fletcher-Munson curve that says the farther AWAY it is
the less highs arrive... I forget.
A comment on:
>< Note 1158.4 by DREGS::BLICKSTEIN "Dave" >
> One thing that occurs to me is that you shouldn't necessarily
> "believe" the needles. ... (It turns out that the meters
> on my unit do NOT display the same data on playback as they did
> during record.)
A well adjusted recording unit will ALWAYS show the SAME LEVEL
on playback that was showing during record. This is a function
of the input level adjustment and the tape bias setting..
your deck should be biassed for the ONE type of tape you use...
Cassette decks with their limited speed are even more prone
to level and bias-related garfing than open-reel decks.
karl
|
1158.8 | miking different for live? | SQM::VINSEL | she took my bowling ball too | Wed Jan 20 1988 08:09 | 12 |
| This thing about not 'eating' the mike, is this a difference between
live and recording? When I do sound for live bands, I find that
if the vocalist doesn't eat the mike, they're constantly changing
the distance between there mouth and the mike, so I've always
recomended that the mike be eaten, then I adjust the EQ to keep
the bass reasonable. I've not really had very much recording
experience, but logic would tell me that I'd face the same problems.
I've also found that my mikes (AKG-321's) have a very thin sound
at 6 inches.
pcv
|
1158.9 | Eat 'Em and Smile (since the EQ is right) | HARDY::JKMARTIN | Me? I'm just a lawn mower... | Wed Jan 20 1988 08:56 | 13 |
| Proximity effects are always much more a problem for live work than
studio work, primarily due to the fact that during studio sessions,
the vocalist usually maintains the same position from the mike...or
at least has no excuse for not maintaining the same position.
In live work (of course, especially with hard drivin' raunch'n'roll),
movement is quite often a necessary stage expression. You know,
bending backwards doing that crazed riff, then coming back up to
the mike for the next verse, etc.
I, too, have used Peter's approach in handling live mike work: set
the EQ/level for worst-case conditions, then agree with the vocalist
to eat the mike.
|
1158.10 | HITECH: Erasers and Towels. | SIMUL8::RUDNICK | | Wed Jan 20 1988 10:37 | 16 |
| I tried the pencil taped to the mike routine last night. I took
the liberty of using the *eraser* side toward me instead of the
sharpened end. That really seemed to help though coming
up with an adjustment between the -10 and 0 (i think dB -- I'm still
new at this) on my meters without peaking at times was still a fairly
fine line. I found most of the time when I would end up above 0
or into the peak range was a blast of short duration. Thinking
of microphones which have screens on them I took a kitchen towel
and covered the mike. This made for less attacks on the peak LED
but brought the signal strength down some. Upon boosting the input
strength I started going back above 0 and peaking.
There must be a fine line here somewhere; I think if I keep on
trying I'll find it.
Ben.
|
1158.11 | LOTECH: I did it myyyyyyyy wayyyyyyy!!!!! | JAWS::COTE | 20 days already? This is easy... | Wed Jan 20 1988 10:47 | 9 |
| Unless your hellbent on a lo-tech, lo-bux solution, why not bite
the bullet for a comp-limiter? This is the kind of thing they
were designed for...
Admittedly, funnin' around with towels, erasers, toilet paper rolls,
and newt eyes can be rewarding and educational, but if you wanna
sound like 'the big kids' you gotta have the toys...
Edd
|
1158.12 | money... | MANANA::RUDNICK | | Wed Jan 20 1988 11:33 | 7 |
| Your right Edd, and I figure on it adventually. I'm just trying
to understand, use, and pay for what I have already first.
How long my patience lasts will probably be the ultimate deciding
factor...
Ben.
|
1158.13 | Comping | ERIC::KENT | | Wed Jan 20 1988 11:43 | 5 |
|
Yep Edd's right the only real answer is a compressor. Check out
the Alesis micro rack verions cheep and stereo and good.
Paul.
|
1158.14 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Wed Jan 20 1988 11:47 | 16 |
| You should be using a mic with a "pop screen" on it. This will not do anything
about times when you sing too loud, but it will prevent puffs of air from
overloading things. Something else to try is to not sing directly at the
microphone, so your breath is not hitting it.
I have heard of some technicians putting up two microphones, a placebo for
the vocalist to swallow, and another one one foot behind. Obviously this
only works with fixed mics. For hand mics you just gotta learn where to
hold it and keep your arm locked as you sway around. I also read about
one singer who got his shoes nailed to the floor.
When I have seen people recording in a studio, they are almost always a
foot OR MORE from a fixed microphone. It may be that professional singers
can sing much louder than you can, so can be farther away. (Opera singers
rarely need PA systems to be heard in the last row) If you try to sing
that loud without voice training, you could hurt yourself.
|
1158.15 | Ehnhanced low frwuency, huh? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jan 20 1988 15:49 | 12 |
| re .7 - the proximity effect is not the Fletcher Munson effect.
The latter is a psychoacoustic effect that results in our perceiving
less bass at low absolute volumes. This is what the "loudness
componsation" switch on a hifi amp is for.
The proximity effect is a physical effect that results in microphones
exhibiting ehnhanced low frewuency response when close to the source.
I don't know if it's named after anybody (Fred Proximity? He invented
the fuse too, didn't he?).
len (can I correct errors other than spelling and vocabulary?)
|
1158.16 | Len's over-componsating.... | JAWS::COTE | 20 days already? This is easy... | Wed Jan 20 1988 15:56 | 12 |
| Is the actual frequency spectrum effected at all by distance??
Seems to me that low frequencies carry farther through any given
medium (Air, wood, metal, pea soup) with high frequencies dropping
off...
...in which case only a high-end roll-off would be needed to suggest
increasing distance.
I stand corrected. (Thanks to my Dr. Scholl's!!)
Edd
|
1158.17 | Well, Isn't That Spatial?! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jan 20 1988 16:08 | 13 |
| No, the proximity effect is more than just the differential absorption
of high frequencies vs. low frequencies. The bass enhancement is
quite a bit more than you'd expect from such differential rolloff.
There's an actual bass boost rather than an apparent lack of bass
loss.
Uhm, is this the note about spatial relationships? If it is, the
latest EM has an interesting article on the subject.
And, uh, Edd, it's [stop it len...slap...thanks, i needed that]
len.
|
1158.18 | this is very hard to explain | MPGS::DEHAHN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 09:14 | 15 |
|
The proximity effect is more pronounced with dynamic mikes, like
the SM series. It takes a certain amount of energy to get that
transducer moving, the biggest amount just to get it started. As
you move closer to the mike, the energy level at the transducer
increases, hence it gets louder. Low frequencies mean longer
excursions, which take more energy. If the transducer is already
moving, then it takes a proportionally smaller amount of energy
to make the longer low frequency excursions than to start it from
rest.
Spatial relationships? Like wow man, pass the windowpane 8^)
CdH
|
1158.19 | | MPGS::DEHAHN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 09:18 | 14 |
|
My advice to .0 is to get a compressor, like the dbx 163x, it's
only around $99.
Paul Kent? mentioned an Alesis micro rack unit...sounds like just
what I'm looking for. I was planning on a single rack space unit
that held a Microverb and a 163x, but if Alesis makes one that is
the same size as the Microverb, then maybe it'll be easier to
mount. Got any details on that little bugger?
Thanks,
CdH
|
1158.20 | The Near And Far Of It... | JAWS::COTE | 20 days already? This is easy... | Thu Jan 21 1988 09:30 | 12 |
| But!!!
Given an environment with few or no reflective surfaces, it is
still possible to tell which of 2 sound sources is further away,
even if the volume of each is adjusted so that they appear to be
at the same level.
So what's the aural quality that allows us to make the distinction?
Edd
|
1158.21 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Thu Jan 21 1988 09:32 | 6 |
| Different microphone designs will have different frequency response curves at
different distances (due to proximity effect) and at different angles from the
centerline (due to the pickup orientation and porting). With your microphone
you should have received some polar plots of its response curves. A brochure
I have from one mic company gives these plots for each model. I'll try
to remember to bring it in and type in some typical numbers.
|
1158.22 | Omni Mikes and Broken Cassette Decks | AQUA::ROST | I feel your innuendo | Thu Jan 21 1988 09:45 | 24 |
| Re: mike proximity effect
Most omnidirectional microphones have much less proximity effect
than cardioids, if the excessive bass is a problem.
I just stay a foot away when I sing, I don't have level problems,
but then I'm not Aretha Franklin 8-) 8-)
Re: Alesis
The Micro-whatever comp/limit box is $125 *list*, so is the exciter
BTW and could be a reasonable alternative to the dBx 163.
Re: ultra cheap peak limiter
Find an old (like early 70s) cassette deck that has a switchable
limiter...most old Sonys did, also a lot of other brands. These
limiters were designed to prevent overmodulation of the tape due
to the fact that modern type II and type IV tapes weren't around
then. You can plug your mike into the deck, then run the deck's
line out to your ministudio.....if you have a real board, plug the
deck between the board and your multitrack. Makes a very good stereo
limiter. Find a deck with bad heads, broken motors, etc. for $10-$25
bucks and you're in business.
|
1158.23 | HHHeeeellllooooooo | AKOV11::JODOIN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 14:40 | 34 |
|
As we all know sound travels in waves. And since air is not a perfect
medium, those waves disperse over distance/time due to friction.
The effects the nodes and the cycles (the node is the height of the
wave and cycle refers to the distance). Because of the friction,
the time to travel one complete cycle increases (distance/time/time)
and the waves broaden (width). Because of this effect more distant
sounds will be naturally more resonant and carry less force. Hence
less impact against the microphone. This will change the
characteristics of the sound enough for the human ear to relate
the distance. And because the primary function of audio equipment
is to repeat these waves, we can tell by listening to recordings
which sounds are more distant.
One simplistic example is to listen to an above ground train coming
in an open area. Even though the ground can be considered a reflective
surface, you can still notice the effect described above. This
is also why live recordings made of a band at a concert take on
a different quality (? correct term) than studio recordings. In
a studio recording all resonance is faked by reverb electronics
and engineered reflective surfaces.
As a note, the Rolling Stones recorded one of their albums (that
I know of) in an old barn in NW Massachusetts, in order to get the
more natural effect of spacial resonance.
I know this is more physics than music, but what is music if not
the physics of manipulating waves to create soothing sounds.
David_in_C_Major
|
1158.24 | Oh No, Not The R-Word! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:03 | 8 |
| re .23 - I think you mean "reverberant" rather than "resonant".
Resonant means characterized by some kind of frequency peak.
The reverberance is due to sound waves from the source taking
alternative paths to the destination, and the effect is more pronounced
as the distance increases.
len.
|
1158.25 | Assuming Stationary Sources, Of Course | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:06 | 9 |
| more re .23 - What you're syaing is that the pitch of sounds decreases
as they travel through air. This is a characteristic of some
transmission media, but I believe that acoustic (pressure) waves
in air only decrease in amplitude as a result of dissipative effects,
and don't exhibit the sort of wavelength broadening (frequency
dispersion) you've described.
len.
|
1158.26 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:37 | 7 |
| Len,
Aha, you mispelled... well you... I mean...
Ah, nevermind ;-)
db
|
1158.27 | | ANGORA::JANZEN | Engineer Tom | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:57 | 3 |
| Dispersion in transmission media is the tendency of different
frequency signals to go different speeds.
Tom
|
1158.28 | | TWIN4::DEHAHN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 17:31 | 27 |
|
Re: whoever it was
Thanks for the Alesis tip. I'll call a few places and let folks
know the details.
Re: Engineer Tom
What you say is true, although the speed isn't as important as time
(which is, of course, a function of speed).
Re: Edd
2 speakers, one in front of you, one placed back a ways, levels
adjusted to the same output. You are listening to the closer one
in the nearfield, which is primarily the speaker. With the other
one, you are in the reverberant field, which is some combination
of the speaker and the room, depending on the throw characteristics
of the speaker, the size of the room, where you are in it etc. The
room has reflective and absorptive surfaces, which will alter the
frequency response and phase of the signal. The ear is extremely
sensitive to small changes in both.
I like notes that have three conversations going on at once 8^)
CdH
|
1158.29 | Ignore that man behind the curtain! | AKOV11::JODOIN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 17:33 | 24 |
|
RE .25
Len,
I may be wrong on the use of RESONANT, I'll go back to my books
and check, but if I remember correctly, pitch will decrease over
time/distance, I'll check that also. You have to realize that I
took my physics courses waaaaaayyyyy back in college, and I am very
rusty. I was surprised at how much I did retain after this long
considering the amount of permanent retention one can expect from
college.
One more thing (since you seem to know something about this),
how do you explain Dr. Bose's acoustic wave theories???????????
They are supposed to work on these principles.
David_in_Cb_after_time_and_distance
|
1158.30 | Microphone specs | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Fri Jan 22 1988 10:38 | 27 |
| The following information is taken from an Audio-Technica pamphlet on their
"Artist Series" microphones.
Their various vocal microphones show elevated response centered on 150 to
200 Hz when you get closer than 12 inches. At 3 inches it goes up by 5
to 7 dB, and at .25 inches it goes up by around 10 dB.
Some of the vocal microphones have a rolloff below 150 Hz, dropping by 15dB
at 50 Hz. They also show a 6dB peak around 4kHz. They have both dynamic
and condenser units with the low-end rolloff and high-end peak, although
they also have some condenser units that are essentially flat (except for
the low-end proximity effect).
They also have a line of instrument microphones. The instrument mics typically
do not have wind screens, do not have bodies designed to minimize handling
noise, and have much flatter response curves (except for proximity effect).
In fact some of the instrument microphones show greater proximity effect
than the vocal mics; like +15dB at 100 Hz at a distance of .25 inches.
Greater than 12 inches they are all pretty flat.
All the directional microphones have polar patterns that show that they are
most directional at high frequencies (5-8 kHz) and much less directional at low
frequencies (100Hz - 1kHz), with from-the-back response varying by 10-20 dB
depending on the frequency.
For example, the ATM21 cardiod pattern dynamic instrument microphone rejects
rear sounds by 10dB at 100 Hz, by 15dB at 1kHz, and by over 20dB above 5kHz.
|
1158.31 | Bet You Didn't Know I Could Dance Like That | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Jan 22 1988 16:59 | 20 |
| re some things back there somewhere.
I don't know what Dr. Bose's acoustic wave theories are, so I can't
comment on them. I do know who Dr. Bose is, as I was an undergraduate
at MIT when he taught EE there.
I am surprised to learn that pressure waves in air change their
frequency (lower). I have never heard of this effect (in air -
it occurs with many other kinds of waves, in other media).
Tom's definition of frequency dispersion is correct, and since I
knew that, I'm not sure why I used the term the way I did.
Regarding db's observation, I suppose one might have misread "syaing"
as a typo or spelling error, but I thought everyone understood that
"sya" was an acronym for "say, yea assert", i.e., say strongly.
len.
|
1158.32 | But It's Not Really The Same | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Jan 22 1988 17:01 | 7 |
| Ah, now I know why I mentioned frequency dispersion - it results
in pulse broadening, which, if you think pictorially as I am
occasionally wont to do, looks like a longer wavelength, yea verily,
a lower frequency.
len.
|
1158.33 | Still there | GCLEF::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Mon Jan 25 1988 08:36 | 7 |
| > I don't know what Dr. Bose's acoustic wave theories are, so I can't
> comment on them. I do know who Dr. Bose is, as I was an undergraduate
> at MIT when he taught EE there.
He still does teach acoustics in the EE department!
- Rick (MIT '82)
|
1158.34 | Make measuremens; discard scholasticism | ANGORA::JANZEN | Engineer Tom | Mon Jan 25 1988 08:40 | 21 |
| My brother the physicist (MS MIT 19something) says YAG lasers can
change the frequency of the input; air doesn't change the frequency
of the input; air does act like a filter; the proximity effect is
probably the result of the direcionality of higher frequencies,
which I think was mentioned in an earlier note.
So, the way I interpret this, high frequencies are somewhat directional
out of the mouth, so the microphone intercepts about the same
amount of signal with small changes in distance near the mike.
However, lower frequencies spread out very faster in all directions,
so 1/r**2 applies to them. 1/r**2 doesn't apply as well to
high frequencies near the mike because the mouth doesn't look
like a point source that near the mike. It's kind of a disk source.
Right next to the mike it might look almost like a plane, and plane
sources don't decrease intensity with distance at all.
Hm. That would boost highs too. Well, it does, you're louder next
to the mike.
Let's get a pressure transducer and map the power output of a singer
around them.
Tom
|
1158.35 | compression: feel the difference. | MANANA::RUDNICK | | Mon Jan 25 1988 11:34 | 10 |
| I never realized physics and rock and roll had so much in common...
There IS more than meets the eye!!!
Well guys my patience ran out, I picked up the Alesis
compressor/limiter at Sam Ash/Hempstead for $119.00. I haven't
had a chance to play with it yet but the instructions read well...
Thanks for the input and physics lessons...
Ben.
|
1158.36 | I looked it up | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Tue Jan 26 1988 12:57 | 9 |
| "Proximity effect" is not so complicated as people have been guessing.
First of all, it only happens on directional microphones. Omni-directional
mics don't have it.
Uni-directional (especially "cardiod") microphones have these little holes in
the back called "ports" that allow sound waves to reach the back side of the
element so as to cancel out any sounds coming from the rear. The lengths and
diameters of the ports are such that low frequencies are reinforced.
|
1158.37 | Live vs Studio techniques... | FSBIC1::DDREHER | | Wed Jan 27 1988 19:02 | 28 |
|
Re: "Eating the mic"
This is done in live situations only, ussually with a dynamic
type microphone. If you don't, you can get alot of bleed through
from the other instuments and the monitor mix on stage which will
cause feedback. This way the sound engineer can EQ and set levels
for vocal peak levels and minimize feedback. Dynamic mics use
a plastic diaphram that vibrates and are usually lower cost ($100) like
the SM-57, ATM-41, SM-58, etc.
In recording, it's best to use a condensor microphone. Its diaphram
vibrates in a magnetic field. I use an AKG-414. It needs 48 volt
'phantom power' which my mixer provides. Vocals are done with the
vocalist standing 1 foot away and wearing head phones to prevent
bleed through. I always use a compressor to even out the peaks, like
a high sustained note, shouts, etc.
It is true that the farther you stand away from the mic, the thinner
the sound (less bottom end). The AKG-414 is extremely sensitive.
From a foot away, I can hear lips smacking, breathing, clothes
rustling, and eye blinking (well almost).
If you have needle type meters, they are are a little slow responding
to peaks. The needle doesn't have a chance to make it to the peek before
the voltage drops, especially on percussive sounds.
Dave
|
1158.38 | Nits | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 28 1988 10:21 | 16 |
| re .37 - The diaphragm in a condenser mic vibrates in an electric
field. That's why they call them "condenser" mics and why they
need power supplies; once upon a time (showing my age again),
capacitors (which don't rely on magnetic fields) were called condensers.
The diaphragm in a dynamic mic is not likely to be made of plastic,
which usually is a nonmagnetic material. Dynamic mics rely on magnetic
fields.
The chief characteristic of condenser mics is that they're expensive.
They generally exhibit better preformance than dynamics, but that's
not to say that dynamics are junk. There are some pretty good dynamic
mics available.
len.
|
1158.39 | nit-on-nit | ANGORA::JANZEN | Help set profile /person | Thu Jan 28 1988 11:47 | 18 |
| > < Note 1158.38 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
> -< Nits >->>
>
> re .37 - The diaphragm in a condenser mic vibrates in an electric
> field. That's why they call them "condenser" mics and why they
> need power supplies; once upon a time (showing my age again),
> capacitors (which don't rely on magnetic fields) were called condensers.
>
> The diaphragm in a dynamic mic is not likely to be made of plastic,
> which usually is a nonmagnetic material. Dynamic mics rely on magnetic
> fields.
>
uh, the diaphrams of all the dynamics mics I've disassembled (cheap
ones) look like transparent plastic; they were attached to coil
electro-magnets, which moved back and forth around a permanent magnet
inside them. The coil moving thru the magnetic field gets an induced
electric current in it.
tom
|
1158.40 | OK, Diaphragm .NE. Transducer | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:25 | 10 |
|
re .39 - yeah, ok, the point is something magnetic or conductive
has to move in response to the sound pressure; Dave's remarks made
it sound like it was the plastic that was inducing a current.
Not that that's impossible; conductive plastics do exist, and promise
to be more common. See the latest Scientific American cover story.
len.
|
1158.41 | Plastics, plastics, everywhere plastics | PLDVAX::JANZEN | Help set profile /person | Thu Jan 28 1988 14:09 | 17 |
| > < Note 1158.40 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
> -< OK, Diaphragm .NE. Transducer >-
> Not that that's impossible; conductive plastics do exist, and promise
> to be more common. See the latest Scientific American cover story.
>
> len.
See PAiAs probably first VCO keyboard, conductive plastic under the keys.
Where the key contacted the plastic chose a length of conductive
plastic, therefore different resistance.
Condenser mics are probably made from plastic plates, I'm guessing.
T.I. calculators use conductive plastics under the keyboard to
contact the pcb matrix, and give a springy feel to the keyboard.
I've taken them apart.
Our lab coats are some % conductive fiber, for electro-static discharge
control
Tom
|
1158.42 | Poor Man's Compressor | DFLAT::DICKSON | Network Design tools | Thu Jan 28 1988 14:15 | 10 |
| Regarding compressors to handle vocal peaks such as shouts, etc:
If you watch an experienced radio announcer at work, you will see him turn
or move away from the microphone when he speaks louder, and move in closer
when he speaks softer.
I remember once watching Garrison Keillor doing "A Prairie Home Companion"
(I was in the third row), and he did a bit which required a loud exclamation
of "Hey!" at certain points. Just before the "hey" he would turn his head
so that he was shouting 90 degrees away from the microphone.
|
1158.43 | | TWIN4::DEHAHN | | Fri Jan 29 1988 09:27 | 11 |
|
Ribbon mikes are considered dynamic mikes, I'm pretty sure of that.
The better ribbons make wonderful vocal mikes, they're smooth and
very transparent, much like a good condenser. I use a Beyer M260
and love it. Their main fault is susceptibility to overload, they
won't take the heat miking a kickdrum, for example.
CdH
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1158.44 | Mixing the recroded vocals | REVERB::HANNA | Why not ? | Tue Dec 27 1988 06:54 | 24 |
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Once you've recorded vocals (dry, using a compressor so no level
problems) how do you go about mixing the vocals with the music ?
I want to use a bit of reverb on the vocals (using a Midiverb ), and
EQ is available.
In my case the vocals are on a track on the 244, feeding into a
channel on a mixer with sends to a Midiverb and/or delay. Recieves
are stereo from the midiverb, mono from the delay, and all into
seperate receive channels.
What I can't achieve is a "tight" vocal that sits in the center of the
mix (which is where I want it).
- How would you pan the (stereo)returns from the reverb in the case
of vocals ?
- Are there any obvious rules about what frequencies should be
boosted/cut ?
Thanks
Zayed
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1158.45 | Vhy a duck? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Tue Dec 27 1988 09:45 | 23 |
| I'm anxious to hear what some of the experts in recording engineering
have to say about this. I didn't get the "home recording book" that
I asked for for X-mas but here's what I know that might help you.
One technique I'm familiar with to "bring out" the vocals is generally
referred to as "ducking".
The general idea of ducking is to compress the "background" under
the vocals by using the vocal track as the controlling signal
(the one that determines the amount of compression) and using
the "background" as the signal that gets compressed.
To do this, your compressor should have two features: Obviously,
it should have two inputs, one for the control signal, one for
the signal to be compressed).
If you're mixing in stereo (and I assume you have a two-chanel
compressor), the compressor should also have a "link"
mode which basically means the equal compression used for both
channels (left and right).
db - whose singing is so bad he ducks his vocals UNDER
the background rathe than OVER it.
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1158.46 | Too Much Stereo Is Bad | AQUA::ROST | Marshall rules but Fender controls | Tue Dec 27 1988 10:58 | 19 |
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Re: .44
What is not "tight" about your vocals?
If you mean that the reverb/delay being panned hard to the left and
right makes the voice sound "wide", then pan them towards the center
(is this too obvious?). Really extreme stereo pans usually sound
horrible anyway. Having the reverb returns slightly off center will
give a sense of body to the vocals without smearing them across the
stereo image.
EQ? I would EQ the basic track to cut out everything below 100
Hz, roll off the octave from 100-200 Hz to taste, boost to taste
in the 1K-2K octave (too much and it gets nasal), roll off the extreme
highs (10K and above) and play with boost and cut from 2K-10K to
taste (try to balance "crispness" against sibilance).
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1158.47 | MOre | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Tue Dec 27 1988 12:41 | 38 |
| Another method of bringing out the vocals is to use a harmonizer
in stereo. That is, pan the dry vocals all the way to one side,
and pan a slightly detuned (harmonized) vocal all the way to
the other side.
I personally don't like flanged or chorused lead vocals. Although
I am unable to explain why, radical flanging or choruses seem
to cause the middle end to drop out very significantly and EQ'ing
does NOT bring them back. A very subtle delay effect works ok
but doesn't contribute anything dramatic.
Other techniques I aware of:
o Octave doubling (use subtlely)
o Mucking with the tape speed during recording
o Obviously, double-tracking (it's hard to do if you don't want it
to be noticeable). If you can't do it, you might try using
a delay with very little modulation.
o EQ-slicing (splitting up the audio band across channels)
o Layering your voice with a synth pad. I've experimented doing
this to enhance my bands back-up vocals. I basically "double"
the backup vocals with a 100-voice chorus turned way down so
that it is not audible as a "different timbre".
I haven't experimented much doing this with lead vocals but I
know it's being done a lot. I think pretty soon, it will be
fairly common to double a vocal part by using a pitch-to-MIDI
converter.
I consider these things to be "enhancing" effects in that it's
supposed to make a voice sound better, but not appear to be an
"effect" as would a slapback, or reverb, etc.
db
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1158.48 | Famous Examples | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Dec 27 1988 12:57 | 12 |
| re .47:
Two notable historical applications of double tracking, manual and
"automatic":
The Beach Boys often double tracked their lead vocals; the consistency
of (Brian Wilson's?) voice and style made the effect quite subtle.
Del Shannon frequently "ADT"ed (i.e., automatically double tracked)
his vocals by using a delay at around 50 msec.
len.
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1158.49 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Three little endians | Tue Dec 27 1988 13:11 | 17 |
| < Note 1158.44 by REVERB::HANNA "Why not ?" >
> In my case the vocals are on a track on the 244, feeding into a
> channel on a mixer with sends to a Midiverb and/or delay. Recieves
> are stereo from the midiverb, mono from the delay, and all into
> seperate receive channels.
> What I can't achieve is a "tight" vocal that sits in the center of the
> mix (which is where I want it).
Assuming you pan the main vocal channel straight up, the center
is the only place it can be. What may be smearing your track around
the stereo image is that the stereo effects returns from your MIDIverb
are probably preset to pan hard left and right, giving a nice wide
reverb field.. if you plug the reverb outputs into actual mixer
channels (rather than the effects returns) you can then use THOSE
channels' pan pots to bring the reverb closer to the center.
karl
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1158.50 | A start point | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Tue Dec 27 1988 22:58 | 17 |
| According to one of my books on recording, boost 5000 thru 7000 Hz with
a good graphics equalizer. Oddly enough, this happens to be the point
that products such as the Aphex Aural Exciter start thier harmonic
boost at. Strange coincidence?? I don't think so. You might want to
wander down to your local music shop that sells these & try one out on
one of thier tape decks. I recently built one of these types of
circuits (look somewhere in the vicinity of note 1773 for more info on
these devices) & I'm amazed at what it does for the vocal track. It
does it better than boosting 5000 thru 7000 hz, but if you got an EQ
available, that would be where I would start (Boost it between the
microphone & the tape deck, onto the actual recording, not
afterwards!!). Watch out for the Exciters, however, you'll be surprized
to learn that you can't use them more than once on somethings (vocals
can use it twice, if you are careful), for example drum mixes that have
cymbals in them (whoa does it work bad!!!).
Jens
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1158.51 | Panning too hard | REVERB::HANNA | Why not ? | Wed Dec 28 1988 05:49 | 13 |
| Thanks to all for the replies. Its giving me a few things to go back
and try.
I think the problem is with the way I'm panning the returns from the
midiverb (hard left/right). I've done that mainly to give a nice spacy
feel to the synth pad which does work fine.
But I find I lose the nice Stereo prespective when I mix down to
two-track cassette if I *don't* have the reverb panned at least
9 o'clock/3 o'clock especially for synths and guitars. Looks like
I may start looking for a 2nd reverb to solve this.
Zayed
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1158.52 | Record Wet | AQUA::ROST | Marshall rules but Fender controls | Wed Dec 28 1988 08:28 | 12 |
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Try putting the reverb onto the vocal when you record it (mono)
then add only a touch of reverb during mixing. This will give a
little bit of stereo spread to the vocal but still plenty of reverb
on it.
I assume you're using a four track?? I record all my tracks with
effects because of the very problem you have.....the reverb or delay
needed for each part is usually different. It's riskier, if you
have too much effect on the track you can't trim it back in the
mix, but after you've been doing it for awhile, you get a good feel
for what the tracks will sound like in the mix.
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1158.53 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Wed Dec 28 1988 09:18 | 12 |
| I second that motion, I always put the effects on dyuring hte recording
process to eliminate the need to attempt to get a reverb patch that
is essentially a 'one size fits all' effect.
Another thing I do since I use what is essentially a live vocal
mike to record is take the bass nearly all the way off, and fuss
about with my parametric midrange and highs to get a clearer sound.
Live mikes tend to be muddy and colored and difficult to record
with.
dbii
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1158.54 | Reverb over easy please! | WARDER::KENT | | Thu Jan 05 1989 03:30 | 16 |
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The other thing that that should not go unmentioned
is the *subtle* use of effects. There are very few voices that sounded
good with the same sound of reverb as a synth pad. A lot of reverb
is bound to make a voice sound muddy. I therfore half agree with
the other comments on adding reverb to tracks on record. What I
tend to do however is record all my instrument tracks with effects
and then record the vocals dry. This allows me to experiment a little
with reverb placement and presence during the mix on that important
vocal track. I wholly concur with the comments on the exciter. Use
it on record with the compressor and then you can just worry about
a bit of gliss at mix time.
Paul.
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1158.55 | My contribution to reverb efx: Ducked Reverb | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Jan 05 1989 10:10 | 13 |
| If I had a large number of compressors and channels, I would tend
to moderately duck the reverb under certain kinds of tracks like
vocals and guitars.
In fact, if I was in a position to "lobby" reverb makers into providing
new features, I would try and convince them to provide programs that
do that automatically.
When I'm not using my compressor and (soon-to-be-bought) extra reverb
unit for recording, they will be in my guitar efx rack dedicated
to my "ducked reverb" effect.
db
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