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ivan@stellysee.de
From | ronald and karen sanchez <eldeluxe@mcn.net> |
Subject | Re: Let it be. busted |
Date | Thu, 20 Nov 2003 14:37:46 -0800 |
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I've been listening to Let It Be on the stereo, in the other room, and it
sounds fine. Yeah a little modern, but there isn't much way around that
anymore.
Wasn't there a discussion a while back about remixing stuff at
home....Well, this album is sort of that case, except they had much
better tools than most of us have on our PC. I think there were so many
possibilities for this album just as there was in the first place that
you have to accept it for what it is. I like the original myself, and I
like the bootlegs I have. This sounds better than the boots, but I still
want to know why Teddy Boy isn't on it!!! The version on Anthology isn't
the one I'd heard before...oh well, they'll redo it again in 20 years.
np: Radio Birdman BrizVegas DVD rough cut...oooooh oooooh
RS
Mark London wrote:
> >From: "bob" <segarini@sympatico.ca>
> >We must have gotten two different versions of the CD...mine is a HUGE
> >improvement over the previous release and boots..
>
> I would be curious how you 2 listen to the CD. I.e., with speakers,
> good headphones, or portable CD headphones? The difference in
> listening experience has to be different. Considering that many
> people listen to music like I do, which is to do so using a portable
> CD player, with your basic inexpensive headphones, I've often
> wondered if producers test how their mix will sound with a portable,
> especially when new digital techniques are used to try and increase
> the quality of older recordings. It might make the music sound
> brighter, but at the same time, you lose the some of the smoothness
> of the original analog recordings. This is especially true of the
> drum and cymbal sound, which Frank complained of. If you listen to
> music with portable CD headphones, the music is right up on your
> ears, and something like overloud or annoying drum or cymbal sounds
> might be more noticable than if you listened with speakers (and
> especially since portable CD players have no controls that allow you
> to correct the sound, except for "extra bass" and "lots of extra
> bass")
>
> P.s. if you have the time, in some cases, you can correct the problem
> with the cymbals by applying a high pass (or notch) filter. The
> drums is another story. I've actually taken the time to use audio
> editing software to manually smooth out the start of each drum hit.
> Although you have to be crazy like myself to spend the amount of time
> necessarily to do this, without being paid for it!
-- Ronald Sanchez
Director Of A&R
Career Records
www.CareerRecords.com
The Donovan's Brain Web Site
www.Donovans-Brain.com
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