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In Reply to: RE: Just Listen to Other Recordings.......... posted by Todd Krieger on July 29, 2016 at 14:58:23
The post was about identifying the source of sibilance, not trying to find sibilance free recordings. I already stated that recordings vary. The info helps most in identifying recordings that are new to the listener. Its just an interesting way of deciphering a recording AND verifying the result all at once without the need to compare.
ET
"If at first you don't succeed, keep on sucking till you do suck seed" - Curly Howard 1936
Follow Ups:
Let's say I sit down in front of a sound system I've never heard before, playing a recording that I've also never heard before, of vocals with reverb. I hear sibilance in the "sss".
How does your observance "identify if sibilance is in the recording or your system"... "all at once without the need to compare."
I think I'm clear on the understanding that if their is sibilance in the vocals AND reverb, then the sibilance is a recording artifact. Therefore if there is no sibilance, the recording is fine. But if the system introduces sibilance to begin with, how would you know? Do you mean that there would be LESS sibilance on the reverb if the recording was fine?
Cheers!
Jonesy
P.S. I always enjoy and appreciate your knowledge and experiences!
"I know just enough to get into trouble. But not enough to get out of it."
No I mean that because the sibilance is also in the reverbed portion of the recording we know it is the original recording because reverb attenuates HF and there would be none in the reverbed portion if it were not in the original recording. Its menutia I admit but still true.
ET
"If at first you don't succeed, keep on sucking till you do suck seed" - Curly Howard 1936
Hi ET,
I get that part, but what if your system is at fault, and not the recording. Wouldn't you then hear the sibilance on both the vocals and the reverb anyways?
Cheers!
Ed
"I know just enough to get into trouble. But not enough to get out of it."
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