On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 10:04:19PM +0100, garry Ogle
wrote:
Grammostola Rosea wrote:
> My sister did an great project with here school as a music teacher. See
> let her students perform an classical concert. They played Haydn.
>
> The recording is done with an zoom H2 I think. I was wondering if its
> possible to improve the sound and how?
>
> Which apps and which plugins?
>
> If an experienced mixer would take look at it, would be great.
>
I certainly can't claim be experienced or any
kind of expert, but I like
this kind of problem!
To my ears the room colouration has made the recording sound a bit
"boxy". Try using jamin to gently cut some of the mid-range 600hz-1200Hz
approx.
It sounds like it was recorded in a very reverberant space,
possibly a church or large chapel. With orchestra and choir
you'd want the mic to go something like 3-4 m high, which is
sort of impractical with a Zoom.
Some EQ will improve it, you need to
- attenuate the LF, either a shelf filter
or a parameteric with F = 30 Hz, BW = 4,
and gain of around -4 dB
- attenuate the mid range around 900 Hz,
using a parametric set to that frequency,
BW = 1.3, gain -6 dB.
- boost th HF, using a parametric with
F = 10 kHz, BW = 3, gain = +5 dB.
(BW are expressed as relative, as e.g. for
my 4-band EQ plugin).
That's all you can do to it, the mic was in the
wrong place and you can't correct that afterwards.
Thanks guys! I'll check the different suggestions, really appreciate it!
@ Fons, You mean you enable filter, section 1 (LF), section 2 (mid
range) and section 4 (HF) in the 4-band EQ plugin?
\r