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How do you know what the recording engineer wanted you to hear? How do you know that rolled off highs are not what he/she wanted?
"What aggravates me is that we don't have a standard in the recording industry for mastering. People use all types of mastering systems and acoustical environments to evaluate the final product. How do you know what the recording engineer wanted you to hear? How do you know that rolled off highs are not what he/she wanted? He may have been using Auratone 5Cs, or Yamaha NS-10M for monitoring and listening in the near-field, where the response changes drastically with position. Those are obviously much different then listening in the far field in a normally reflective room with a pair of speakers with drastically different power response. The problem starts with the lack of standards on the mastering side. If we had a standard there, we would then be able to meaningfully talk about what we should get on the playback side. "====================I have to think about this. Good points- but I don't know if it has to be this complicated. I have recordings where the highs are rolled off and some where they are not. I don't believe you have to take it back as far as the recording studio. We have no control over anything on the 'other side' of the CD or LP. Have you ever used a thundering rainstorm as a test? It's incredibly detailed, contains a plethora of frequencies, has a sound stage and only works well with Hi-Def audio systems. Of course the storm has to be VERY well recorded. It's easy to mess such recording up, especially the thundering part. The listener has to acclimate themselves to the recording as well. There's so much detail it will take a few listening sessions to ascertain what's going on.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 5 May 2009, 03:44 pmHow do you know what the recording engineer wanted you to hear? How do you know that rolled off highs are not what he/she wanted?I'm addressing only what happens in the listener's room. The best a mixing or mastering engineer can aim for is to make the music sound pleasing on a system that is as flat as possible. Then ideally the listener has a system that's as flat as possible too, to hear at least a good approximation of what was intended. But adding distortion or EQ during playback can only take you farther from what the engineer heard, unless the playback EQ is compensating for deficiencies in the listener's system.--Ethan
wouldn't be nice if we had a standard mastering environment?
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 5 May 2009, 05:12 pmwouldn't be nice if we had a standard mastering environment?Well sure, but only a handful of top pros could afford it. Photo of black belt engineer George Massenburg's room below.This is pretty far away from whether a replacement AC power cord can make an audible difference! --Ethan
Kevin-That would be **tough** !!What about computer generated music? AKA: MIDI?It would be completely instrumental, but you set the standards.
What's the rough cost of a room like that? $500k?
I'm thinking more on the lines of an IEC room, with standards for the basics, speaker specifications, listening distance, room specifications etc.
...Why don't we have standards for recording studios and recording engineers? Why is everyone using their own flavor?
what do you think are the reasons for this lack of standards?
An audio or studio technician operates the equipment and an audio engineer is the one who designs/builds the equipment and will most likely have a degree. You can study a degree in Audio Production, The Audio Engineering Society sets standards for every aspect of the role and here they are. Unfortunately this page only has excerts as you have to buy the full standards, as far as I'm aware theses are internationally acceptable:http://www.aes.org/publications/standards/As you can see by scrolling down there are many. Cheers, Ben.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 5 May 2009, 07:40 pm...Why don't we have standards for recording studios and recording engineers? Why is everyone using their own flavor?I don't know the answer, but Kevin I am wondering please: If you were forced to speculate, what do you think are the reasons for this lack of standards?P.S. I really liked the "drag coefficient of a fork lift" analogy - classic!
The consumer can choose a studio that meets these requirements though. A professional standard is not law, unless the profession involves the law of course.
Browntrout: I've not read through all the Harbeth information but the BBC acted in the capacity of an industry standard maker in much the way I'm talking about. We have a lot more research about what makes good loudspeakers than we did in the hey-day of the BBC. I'd say we need a standards body that updates the standards every 5-10 years with some eye towards the reality of the cost of updating studios. That body would consist of industry people and they would be responsible for tracking current research. I wouldn't advocate a static standard. It should be something that evolves with the industry and it would be International in scope. This is all a pipe dream. I don't see any one player being powerful enough to make it happen and as Ethan has alluded to, the trend is more towards small independent recording studios rather than larger well-funded ones. People buy music based upon what they like and think very little about the recording process behind it.