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[RE: Protools]Two things he said stick out:The number of tracks you can have in the mix is limited only by your processing power andI'll give up the ambiance of tape for the convenience of being able to do this ("this" meaning ease of recording and mixing).
This is veering off topic but I can see why analog tape has gone out of fashion.I was over at a buddy's house a few weeks ago and he was giving me an overview of Pro Tools for a solo album he's working on.Two things he said stick out:The number of tracks you can have in the mix is limited only by your processing power andI'll give up the ambiance of tape for the convenience of being able to do this ("this" meaning ease of recording and mixing).I've gotta admit, Pro Tools is pretty slick.That being said, his preferred format for music storage is 45 rpm.
....Brother in Arms by Dire Straights...said to be the first DDD
Definitely not. DDD releases were ready to go the first day the first CD plants cranked up, in 1982. Brothers in Arms came years later.
.... Here we have a medium - the CD - that has an extra 20 dB or 30 dB of dynamic range compared to the LP, and the artists, producers and engineers (pick your favorite villain) just throw it away. It's just sad.
Even more importantly, just imagine the ramifications if all CD's had been produced from day 1 with 30dB of headroom. It would have changed the course of audio.Imagine you are listening to a CD at a typical average power of 1W and 85-90dB of sound level, when suddenly the producer USES all 30dB of headroom. You now require 1000W of amplification and 1000W of loudspeaker power handling.The realism and dynamics would have left LP audiophiles in the 80's picking their jaws off the floor. Not to mention their 5" bass drivers!To deal with this, the industry would have started supplying the necessary amps and speakers. LPs would have been sorely exposed for the dynamically flat and compressed and noisy medium they are.There would have been no LP revival a decade later. There would have been no SET revival.
Something that seldom mentioned in discussions of the CD's alleged dynamic range is the increasing distortion that occurs when the recorded signal is described by less than 16 bits. A quick glance at measurements accompanying any review of a DAC in Stereophile will show the terrible amount of distortion at -90, even at -60dB you have more than 3%THD. The huge dynamic range claimed for the CD isn't really there.Scotty
That's not quite true. Analogue recording mediums such as magnetic tape, have peak distortion levels when the signal is at peak levels. The distortion falls as the signal level decreases until the signal is lost in the noise floor. Digital recording has exactly the opposite characteristic, which can easily explain how low level information can be obscured. My case for the illusory nature of the 16 bit mediums dynamic range still stands. The CD has about the same usable dynamic range as a vinyl record, roughly 60dB.Scotty
The distortion problem with the digital medium is a direct function of bit depth, the best case scenario is when all 16 bits are used to describe the waveform. There are roughly 6bits left to describe the -60dB waveform which makes a good case for a 24 bit system from a distortion standpoint.Scotty