On 01/02/2013 03:13 AM, Tim E. Real wrote:
On January 1, 2013 07:26:42 PM Al Thompson wrote:
On 01/01/2013 02:20 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
The way our ears work, what frequency we actually
hear shifts slightly
> with intensity. There is a great book on
acoustics by F. Alton
> Everest that goes into this a bit in one of the earlier chapters. I
> am still reading through all of it, but it is an interesting
> phenomenon. Pitch is in actuality a subjective form of Frequency, not
> objective, and this is reflected in this phenomenon.
This is something you learn VERY early on if you mix monitors for a
living. If you've got someone who sings consistently flat (especially
lead singers), turn their monitor DOWN about 3-4 dB, no matter how much
they scream and yell about it.
The audience will thank you profusely.
Humm, I wonder if this is why much of
Johnny Cash's work has him 25 to 50
cents flat. He was back on key for a while after the tonsillectomy.
Cheers, Gene
Well, some people just sing flat. (Bob Dylan comes to mind). No
amount
of monitor magic will fix tone-deafness.
Turn on the "Auto-Ruin" !
Can you imagine how immediately forgettable and horrible the classics we
all know and love would have been if Auto-Tune had been invented back
then? Or how sterile and lifeless all those mixes would have been if
they had been "corrected" within an inch of their lives on a DAW, played
by MIDI and quantized, had fifty completely unrelated reverbs gracing
the various tracks?
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Staat heißt das kälteste aller kalten Ungeheuer. Kalt lügt es auch;
und diese Lüge kriecht aus seinem Munde: 'Ich, der Staat, bin das Volk.'
- [Friedrich Nietzsche]