Originally posted by cloughie
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Modern Recorded Sound
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostCould you elaborate a little on this? I know equipment has changed, with jewel speakers and subwoofers being used by many in preference to larger speakers, but ultimately a recording of a live performance should aim to replicate the original.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostCould you elaborate a little on this? I know equipment has changed, with jewel speakers and subwoofers being used by many in preference to larger speakers, but ultimately a recording of a live performance should aim to replicate the original.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostCould you elaborate a little on this? I know equipment has changed, with jewel speakers and subwoofers being used by many in preference to larger speakers, but ultimately a recording of a live performance should aim to replicate the original.
DON'T GO THERE
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI know this to be otherwise
Sound quality today can be (and I stress CAN) awesome and far superior to anything from the 1950's if it's clarity, separation, lack of distortion / artefacts and so on that you seek
(b) Digital recording has a massively greater dynamic range than analogue recording which especially makes a difference in orchestral music, although some prefer for home listening the smaller dynamic range produced by the compression used in all analogue recordings.
(c) The "warmth" some ascribe to analogue recordings is actually distortion, let's call it what it is!
(d) Editing is much easier with digital recordings, so that postproduction can be much more precise (if there's time).
As I say, some prefer the sound of analogue recordings - but in many ways digital recording is an enormous improvement.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post(a) Digital recording isn't affected by tape hiss: a silence is really a silence.
(b) Digital recording has a massively greater dynamic range than analogue recording which especially makes a difference in orchestral music, although some prefer for home listening the smaller dynamic range produced by the compression used in all analogue recordings.
(c) The "warmth" some ascribe to analogue recordings is actually distortion, let's call it what it is!
(d) Editing is much easier with digital recordings, so that postproduction can be much more precise (if there's time).
As I say, some prefer the sound of analogue recordings - but in many ways digital recording is an enormous improvement.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post(a) Digital recording isn't affected by tape hiss: a silence is really a silence.
(b) Digital recording has a massively greater dynamic range than analogue recording which especially makes a difference in orchestral music, although some prefer for home listening the smaller dynamic range produced by the compression used in all analogue recordings.
(c) The "warmth" some ascribe to analogue recordings is actually distortion, let's call it what it is!
(d) Editing is much easier with digital recordings, so that postproduction can be much more precise (if there's
time).
As I say, some prefer the sound of analogue recordings - but in many ways digital recording is an enormous improvement.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut real silence does not exist. A digital silence can often sound unnatural
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNow this is where we differ. The improvement between a good analogue recording and a good digital one is quite marginal, particularly when compared with the improvements I listed re the earlier developments in audio history. Indeed, many digital recordings are worse - compare DG recordings made in the 1970s with those they made in the 80s.
Something that shouldn't be forgotten, though, is that in the pre-digital days making a releaseworthy recording was an expensive process requiring numerous specialised skills, while nowadays this is not the case to the same degree, which means almost anyone with a minimum of gear can produce (and mix/edit) listenable recordings. That I think is an enormous technical step forward.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post(a) Digital recording isn't affected by tape hiss: a silence is really a silence.
(b) Digital recording has a massively greater dynamic range than analogue recording which especially makes a difference in orchestral music, although some prefer for home listening the smaller dynamic range produced by the compression used in all analogue recordings.
(c) The "warmth" some ascribe to analogue recordings is actually distortion, let's call it what it is!
(d) Editing is much easier with digital recordings, so that postproduction can be much more precise (if there's time).
As I say, some prefer the sound of analogue recordings - but in many ways digital recording is an enormous improvement.
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Now this is where we differ. The improvement between a good analogue recording and a good digital one is quite marginal, particularly when compared with the improvements I listed re the earlier developments in audio history. Indeed, many digital recordings are worse - compare DG recordings made in the 1970s with those they made in the 80s.[/QUOTE]
Early digital recordings could be awful. That was 30 years ago. The technology has been mastered by recording engineers by now.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut real silence does not exist. A digital silence can often sound unnatural.
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