14 Sep 2015, 02:17 | #1 |
Monstro helps me spell things...
Join Date: 05.01.2007
Location: Masculine, Pennsylvania
Posts: 9,105
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The Dynamics chart for Meat albums is appalling
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14 Sep 2015, 03:11 | #3 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 16.04.2003
Location: Sheffield UK
Posts: 5,910
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Might I ever care?
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14 Sep 2015, 04:22 | #4 |
Monstro helps me spell things...
Join Date: 05.01.2007
Location: Masculine, Pennsylvania
Posts: 9,105
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Yes you should care this is how each release sounds dynamically
Lots of red.... |
14 Sep 2015, 04:36 | #5 | |
Spirit in the Night
Join Date: 23.07.2008
Location: On the edge of town (in the Darkness...)
Posts: 1,559
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In simple terms, the dynamic range refers to the difference in loudness between the loudest parts of a recording and the softest parts. A larger range is better, because there's more variation in the sound. When people talk about compression in terms of audio recordings, it means that the range is reduced; quieter instruments are raised in volume to be equally as loud as the louder instruments. The result can be a muddied mess that can be fatiguing on the ears after awhile.
In recent years, the trend has been to master recordings using more dynamic compression (note the difference in score between Bat I and HCTB, for instance). One of the main reasons for this tendency is the way that people tend to listen to music these days; music that is more compressed and louder sounds "better" on cheap earbuds and computer speakers than less compressed music. But, you lose a lot of "space" in the music. Quote:
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14 Sep 2015, 05:29 | #6 | |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 16.04.2003
Location: Sheffield UK
Posts: 5,910
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Quote:
Julie I read your explanation .. went over my head without ruffling my parting For me it's about Meat's voice, the passion, the words .. one reason I have always adored Meat's albums is I can hear the words .. he is clear in diction .. and the words mean as much, arguably more than the music for me. So you're right .. I will never care |
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14 Sep 2015, 07:52 | #7 | |
Monstro helps me spell things...
Join Date: 05.01.2007
Location: Masculine, Pennsylvania
Posts: 9,105
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Quote:
Guess most people don't think like I do |
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14 Sep 2015, 19:26 | #8 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 16.02.2003
Location:
Posts: 2,217
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Not sure if this is relevant or not, but "Cheatin' in your dreams" sounds very faint on the US version of BA.
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14 Sep 2015, 20:47 | #9 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 15.01.2007
Posts: 5,192
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Cheatin' In Your Dreams is very poorly mixed on the US version of BA.
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14 Sep 2015, 23:04 | #10 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 24.07.2006
Posts: 1,269
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I guess some people don't care if the sound quality is crap at a concert either. If great performances aren't being heard with the clarity and range that they deserve due to poor mastering that's a shame however you look at it, I would think.
Last edited by lorenzoduke; 14 Sep 2015 at 23:33. |
14 Sep 2015, 23:35 | #11 |
Mega Loafer
Join Date: 18.06.2003
Location: At The End Of The Line
Posts: 2,651
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Sometimes variations in volume are part of the drama of a song... E. G. For Crying Out Loud, which goes from tender softness to storming crescendo.
Sometimes a song is in your face from start to finish e.g. Peace On Earth. Either is fine. My point is, on its own, this information is of little use. You have to understand the context and reasons behind it to draw meaningful conclusions. |