Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread
Print Thread
Go To
Page 1 of 2 1 2
#377617 11/27/16 05:10 PM
Off-Topic
E
eddie1261
Unregistered
eddie1261
Unregistered
E
The guy who does my mixdowns has his studio in a bedroom and he has a whole lot of wall treatment, particularly in the corners of the room. I get the concept of cutting down on the natural room echo and stuff, but my question is this.

Everything I do is recorded at line level. I have never recorded a guitar or bass or keyboards by putting a mic in front of an amp. It's all direct input line-level recording. So why do I need to care about my room? I am not recording anything with live mics outside of singing, and when I do that I am in a foam lined enclosure that is a 180 degree hood wide enough to step into and be completely inside it, and it is all lined with foam. My vocals are completely dead in there, and what effects I may want to add will be put in digitally.

What do you guys think about this topic when put into the context of never recording open mics? Seems like I should not have to be concerned with wall treatment.

#377619 11/27/16 05:18 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Do you sit in the same room and listen to live speakers? These also incorporate 'room' and could affect a mix.
Just a thought


I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome
Make your sound your own!
Off-Topic
E
eddie1261
Unregistered
eddie1261
Unregistered
E
Somewhat, Harv, at low levels and the monitors are 30 inches from me. I have the wall opposing the speakers, otherwise stated the wall that is behind me, covered in a blanket because it is also an alcove, but other than that I have nothing. My bigger problem is that my Wharfedale monitors tend to be "bass light" so I add bass to sound right through them. Anywhere else I listen then the bass is too hot, so I have to approximate. I listen through the studio monitors, my office computer speakers, my living room sound bar, and my car stereo, and compare. Who was it, Phil Spector who had a car radio speaker in his mixdown room so he could hear what it would sound like in those 1960s cars?

#377659 11/28/16 01:01 AM
Off-Topic
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 20,316
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 20,316
Originally Posted By: eddie1261
Who was it, Phil Spector who had a car radio speaker in his mixdown room so he could hear what it would sound like in those 1960s cars?

I also believe that in 1982, Quincy Jones wanted to hear tracks he worked on during the production of Michael Jackson's "Thriller" Album on a 6-transistor radio speaker. He said that the mix needed to sound OK on that too, not just what he could listen to in the studio.


BIAB & RB2025 Win.(Audiophile), Sonar Platinum, Cakewalk by Bandlab, Izotope Prod.Bundle, Roland RD-1000, Synthogy Ivory, Kontakt, Focusrite 18i20, KetronSD2, NS40M Monitors, Pioneer Active Monitors, AKG K271 Studio H'phones
Off-Topic
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 8,335
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 8,335
Hey Video Track,

I have found that, generally speaking, if I mix on the cheapest pair of speakers I have it usually sounds great on everything else.

Off-Topic
E
eddie1261
Unregistered
eddie1261
Unregistered
E
Originally Posted By: VideoTrack
I also believe that in 1982, Quincy Jones wanted to hear tracks he worked on during the production of Michael Jackson's "Thriller" Album on a 6-transistor radio speaker.


Meh. Quincy Jones. Now who's HE? LOL!!!

#377868 11/28/16 01:16 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,815
Expert
Offline
Expert
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,815
I mostly record acoustic instruments so room sound is quite important to me. Unfortunately my room is untreated (ha, ha). I do DI any electric guitar and bass stuff, though.

By the way, most foam based vocal enclosures don't do much with reflections for frequencies under 1khz. They just can't absorb those frequencies (http://www.soundonsound.com/reviews/how-effective-are-portable-vocal-booths ).

As you know I often discussed your overly reverb-y vocals on your early recordings that I heard. Since you said you didn't add reverb, it was all unwanted room reverb.


Now at bandcamp: Crows Say Vee-Eh @ bandcamp or soundcloud: Kevin @ soundcloud
#377878 11/28/16 02:30 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 7,913
R
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
R
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 7,913
Eddie, if you aren't doing your own mixdowns using speakers in your space (as I interpret your post), then your room is pretty much removed from the situation since you aren't doing any microphone recording.

Off-Topic
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 408
W
PG Music Staff
Offline
PG Music Staff
W
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 408
Originally Posted By: eddie1261


What do you guys think about this topic when put into the context of never recording open mics? Seems like I should not have to be concerned with wall treatment.
Originally Posted By: rharv
Do you sit in the same room and listen to live speakers? These also incorporate 'room' and could affect a mix.
Just a thought


Yep, exactly what I was going to say. Sounds like you have the best possible workaround, though, Eddie -- listening on multiple systems is key.


Will - PG Music
#378034 11/29/16 04:45 AM
Off-Topic
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,341
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,341
While you might have recorded everything direct and "in the box", you are listening in a room.

The room you listen in will affect what you hear. As a result, what started as line level quickly morphs into the results of the room's acoustic characteristics. Is the room live or dead or somewhere in between? Are there nulls or hot-spots and at what frequencies....AND... are they occurring at the place where you are setting to do your mixing? All of that and more affect the mix you make in that room. Any time you put sound into a space, there are reflections and the sound waves will be in and out of phase depending on the frequency, and the location and the reflectivity or absorption of the surfaces.

This can result in mixes that are so far off, it's not even funny. Rooms should be tested and treated if you really want to get consistently good results with your mixes.

Using a transistor radio to check a mix is fine, but using the cheapest speakers possible to mix and thinking you're going to get superb mixes every time as a result is just wrong thinking. If, no, let me correct that right here..... the cheap speakers WILL have a bias...lets say they have a poor low end response and a rolled off high end response due to small cones and cheap or no tweeters, you will produce mixes that tend to be bass heavy and brittle on the high end when played on a decent consumer system. Now, factor in what the room does to the sound and you generally end up "chasing" the mix. Test it in the car, the home stereo, your buddy's car, your iPod,,,, and they all sound different and most sound bad in one way or another.

Ideally, you want to use good speakers in a treated room.

Of course, it's not always possible to have a treated room so we do have to accept the inherent compromises of reality. That's how most of us work. We learn the room, and mix accordingly. Test with cans and test with other players in other rooms and eventually get to the point where we can produce decent mixes that work well in most situations. Treating a room is not simply a matter of buying some sound absorbing things and hanging them on the walls and ceiling. Although that's what most folks do. There's science and physics behind the proper placement of sound absorbers and reflective surfaces in a studio.

Another option regarding treated rooms is to use technology and use something like ARC. http://www.ikmultimedia.com/products/arc/ Advanced Room Correction software. It has a calibrated mic and the software to analyze the room and automatically correct the sound coming out of the speakers so that what you hear in your mixing position/chair, is as accurate as your speakers can make it. Essentially, it claims to remove the room from the equation. I use this and I know several other studio owners who use this on all of their mixes. It seems to work fairly well but in and of itself, it's not a replacement for using proper treatment.

Mixing on headphones: Some folks do. I have done this as well. I guess it really comes down to.... you gotta do what you gotta do. However, mixing with cans is not the ideal way. So many of the less expensive cans are consumer oriented and therefore are made with a built in bias on the sound they produce. If you mix in cans, be sure to double check the mix and triple check it too, on other systems with speakers to be sure it's not coming across as an unbalanced mix. It's really easy to get an "ear-candy" headphone mix that sounds like crap in a good stereo.

So yes, the room is really critical to the finished mix.

BTW: a really, really, really good book to read on this topic, for a much deeper understanding of rooms and acoustics is called Mixing Secrets for the Small Studio by Mike Senior. The first few chapters cover speakers and sound laying a critical base upon which to build an understanding. If you don't have this book, buy it and study it. If you do have it, pull it off the shelf, dust it off, and read/study it again.

EDIT: I'm in the process of building/rehabbing a small 16x16 building into my future music studio. All of the things I have said in this and more are coming into play for me as I move through the building process. Currently, the building is insulated, rough inspected, and ready to start with the sheet rock and wood on the walls. Room treatment is on the top of my mind.

Last edited by Guitarhacker; 11/29/16 04:48 AM.

You can find my music at:
www.herbhartley.com
Add nothing that adds nothing to the music.
You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both.

The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
#378050 11/29/16 05:24 AM
Off-Topic
Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 693
Journeyman
Offline
Journeyman
Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 693
Thanks for the good thread. Interesting reading.

Last edited by cressjl; 11/30/16 02:53 AM. Reason: Remove unwanted drivel.

Joel
Off-Topic
E
eddie1261
Unregistered
eddie1261
Unregistered
E
Great insight, Herb. When I get to the first "I think I am done cooking" place, I listen on my Wharfedale monitors, on my Logitech computer speakers in another smaller room, on a Samsung soundbar in the living room, in my car from a thumb drive, on a laptop, through headphones, and again through the Wharfedales with my back turned 180 degrees. I make notes, and tweak level and a touch of EQ on the vocal track, and do it all again. THEN, when I am happy with the sound across the board, I dump it all to wav files and it waits for me to finish the rest of the songs and then they all go over to my mixing engineer pal, who won some kind of award in Ohio for his work and is really outstanding. He knows EQ and compression WAY better than I do, particularly in the area of where to use it. I find spending time on playing with compression and such as a distraction and a waste of my time because his ear is better than mine, and his bank of knowledge in the field is far deeper.

So yeah, I listen in a lot of different forums. I am going to buy that book. I know who Mike Senior is and have heard him speak on various web shows. I always wanted to ask him if he has a son named Mike. Mike Senior junior.

Last edited by eddie1261; 11/29/16 09:01 AM.
#378119 11/29/16 09:34 AM
Off-Topic
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 12,672
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 12,672
Eddie -

When I saw your subject line, what went through my head was, "well, yeah, my home studio is pretty baffling, too". smile

Thanks for the chuckle.


John

Laptop-HP Omen I7 Win11Pro 32GB 2x2TB, 1x4TB SSD
Desktop-ASUS-I7 Win10Pro 32GB 2x1.5TB, 2x2TB, 1x4TB SATA

BB2025/UMC404HD/Casios/Cakewalk/Reaper/Studio One/MixBus/Notion/Finale/Dorico/Noteworthy/NI/Halion/IK

http://www.sus4chord.com
#378260 11/29/16 03:00 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,341
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 10,341
Originally Posted By: eddie1261
Great insight, Herb. When I get to the first "I think I am done cooking" place, I listen on my Wharfedale monitors, on my Logitech computer speakers in another smaller room, on a Samsung soundbar in the living room, in my car from a thumb drive, on a laptop, through headphones, and again through the Wharfedales with my back turned 180 degrees. I make notes, and tweak level and a touch of EQ on the vocal track, and do it all again.


Wow that's a lot of work. The thing I try to remember is that the pro's generally mix on one set of speakers and might give one of the interns the job of cross checking it on something else.... but they trust the speakers they know.

I try to do the same thing with mine. I listen on my MP3 player to see if I need fixes to the song structure.


You can find my music at:
www.herbhartley.com
Add nothing that adds nothing to the music.
You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both.

The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
#378667 11/30/16 08:15 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
Expert
Offline
Expert
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
I listen on multiple systems in multiple places also. I also compare my mixes to Professional or good sounding mixes of similar styles or at least similar genres.
I was looking at Acoustic Ceiling tiles at Home Depot the other day. The kind that fit in a T-Bar drop ceiling. They are 23 1/2 inch X 47 1/2 inch. About the size of a movie poster on the wall at a movie theatre. They say "55%" sound reduction. I put them in a tent shape and stuck my head inside and it felt like my brain got sucked out through my ears. Drastic difference in a noisy and echo-ie environment. $20 for 3 sheets. $35 for 6 sheets.
I think these would make a big difference if I hung a few spaced out on my ceiling and walls with a 1/2" to 1" air gap behind them. They are very light weight and easy to cut. So, I might make some 24 X 24 to fit some areas. Might even try fitting them into poster frames from the 99 cents only store or a thrift store to give them a clean edge look.
But, for now I gotta work on my Christmas party songs. Maybe in January. Just an idea.


Does the noise in your head bother me ?
#378935 12/01/16 01:56 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Best drum recordings I ever got were in a room with this type of ceiling (with nothing but insulated floor space above that).
Helped separate the drums yet kept the cymbals crystal clear. I actually used the T frame to loop mic cords over and hang mics to get them just where I wanted them without so many intrusive stands..

I have pictures around here somewhere .. I still own the room.
Just haven't recorded drums here in a while, since everything got moved to the nicer (and purpose built) room down the street. Wife's happier .. it was our bedroom. Lots of fluffy dead surfaces and one small warm reflective area (brick). We'd have drum sets in there for weeks at a time .. my kids thought it was cool, wife not so much.

Found one (probably 10-12 years ago looking at it <grin>)
Apparently I used washcloths to help dampen things when I moved ceiling tiles.
I'm surprised she stayed with me. Our bedroom set is just out of view to the right ..



Attached Files (Click to download or enlarge) (Only available when you are logged in)
mopics 007.jpg (436.67 KB, 111 downloads)
Last edited by rharv; 12/01/16 02:44 PM.

I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome
Make your sound your own!
#379728 12/03/16 10:14 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
Expert
Offline
Expert
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
Nice mixer stand also. Is that the box on the left that your brand new CRT monitor came in? And, why is there Comet in a room made of pine with a brick fire place? Does that stuff help to get clean takes or something?


Does the noise in your head bother me ?
#379944 12/04/16 03:29 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 22,165
Hey, I said it was "(probably 10-12 years ago .. "

maybe more
but yes, having comet around does improve the takes
and the mixer stand was quite comfy


I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome
Make your sound your own!
Off-Topic
E
eddie1261
Unregistered
eddie1261
Unregistered
E
Originally Posted By: rharv
but yes, having comet around does improve the takes
and the mixer stand was quite comfy


You added the comet when you wanted the guitar to have a little more grit?

#385144 12/19/16 07:26 PM
Off-Topic
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
Expert
Offline
Expert
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,753
I've used talcum powder on my fretting hand to make playing a little smoother.
I'll have to try the Comet technique to see what that does.
Hey, new invention. Lets put it in smaller bottles and sell it as automatic string and fret board cleaner.


Does the noise in your head bother me ?
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Go To
Page 1 of 2 1 2

Link Copied to Clipboard
ChatPG

Ask sales and support questions about Band-in-a-Box using natural language.

ChatPG's knowledge base includes the full Band-in-a-Box User Manual and sales information from the website.

PG Music News
Video: Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac®: VST3 Plugin Support

Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac® now includes support for VST3 plugins, alongside VST and AU. Use them with MIDI or audio tracks for even more creative possibilities in your music production.

Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Macs®: VST3 Plugin Support

Video: Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac®: Using VST3 Plugins

Join the conversation on our forum.

Band-in-a-Box 2025 for Mac Videos

With the release of Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac, we’re rolling out a collection of brand-new videos on our YouTube channel. We’ll also keep this forum post updated so you can easily find all the latest videos in one convenient spot.

From overviews of new features and walkthroughs of the 202 new RealTracks, to highlights of XPro Styles PAK 8, Xtra Styles PAKs 18, the 2025 49-PAK, and in-depth tutorials — you’ll find everything you need to explore what’s new in Band-in-a-Box® 2025.

Reference this forum post for One-Stop Shopping of our Band-in-a-Box® 2025 Mac Videos — we’ll be adding more videos as they’re released!

Band-in-a-Box 2025 for Mac is Here!

Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac is here, packed with major new features and an incredible collection of available new content! This includes 202 RealTracks (in Sets 449-467), plus 20 bonus Unreleased RealTracks in the 2025 49-PAK. There are new RealStyles, MIDI SuperTracks, Instrumental Studies, “Songs with Vocals” Artist Performance Sets, Playable RealTracks Set 4, two new sets of “RealDrums Stems,” XPro Styles PAK 8, Xtra Styles PAK 19, and more!

Special Offers
Upgrade to Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac with savings of up to 50% on most upgrade packages during our special—available until July 31, 2025! Visit our Band-in-a-Box® packages page for all the purchase options available.

2025 Free Bonus PAK & 49-PAK Add-ons
We've packed our Free Bonus PAK & 49-PAK with some incredible Add-ons! The Free Bonus PAK is automatically included with most Band-in-a-Box® for Mac 2025 packages, but for even more Add-ons (including 20 Unreleased RealTracks!) upgrade to the 2025 49-PAK for only $49. You can see the full lists of items in each package, and listen to demos here.

If you have any questions, feel free to connect with us directly—we’re here to help!

Band-in-a-Box 2025 Italian Version is Here!

Cari amici
È stata aggerate la versione in Italiano del programma più amato dagli appassionati di musica, il nostro Band-in-a-Box.
Questo è il link alla nuova versione 2025.

Di seguito i link per scaricare il pacchetti di lingua italiana aggiornati per Band-in-a-Box e RealBand, anche per chi avesse già comprato la nuova versione in inglese.

Band-in-a-Box 2025 - Italiano
RealBand 2025 - Italiano

Band-in-a-Box 2025 French Version is Here!

Bonjour à tous,

Band-in-a-Box® 2025 pour Windows est disponible en Français.
Le téléchargement se fait à partir du site PG Music

Pour ceux qui auraient déjà acheté la version 2025 de Band-in-a-Box (et qui donc ont une version anglaise), il est possible de "franciser" cette version avec les patchs suivants:

BIAB 2025 - francisation
RealBand 2025 - francisation

Voilà, enjoy!

Band-in-a-Box 2025 German Version is Here!

Band-in-a-Box 2025 für Windows Deutsch ist verfügbar!

Die deutsche Version Band-in-a-Box® 2025 für Windows ist ab sofort verfügbar!

Alle die bereits die englische Version von Band-in-a-Box und RealBand 2024 installiert haben, finden hier die Installationsdateien für das Sprachenupdate:

https://nn.pgmusic.com/pgfiles/languagesupport/deutsch2025.exe
https://nn.pgmusic.com/pgfiles/languagesupport/deutsch2025RB.exe

Update Your Band-in-a-Box® 2025 to Build 1128 for Windows Today!

Already using Band-in-a-Box 2025 for Windows®? Download Build 1128 now from our Support Page to enjoy the latest enhancements and improvements from our team.

Stay up to date—get the latest update now!

Forum Statistics
Forums58
Topics84,304
Posts777,518
Members39,612
Most Online25,754
Jan 24th, 2025
Newest Members
Claudio Paolini, bjornen71, CATBELLOU, Banjopotamus, BudLab
39,612 Registered Users
Top Posters(30 Days)
MarioD 148
zedd 119
DC Ron 107
nonchai 103
WaoBand 102
rsdean 87
Today's Birthdays
Manos
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5