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[MEDIA=soundcloud]kevin-white-2/who-we-are-falling[/MEDIA]

Hey All!

I put a live unit together after 30 odd years of not playing nice w/ others. This is our second tune we've recorded together.

The concept here is to record us playing all at once, so that we can best show what we sound like live. I will admit we employ at two step process. We record all the instruments playing all together, and then we go back and overdub the vocals ... but the result is a very honest representation of what my new group sounds like live.

Please enjoy -- and any/all comments are warmly appreciated!

Best,

Kev-

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kevinwhitect Sun, 10/30/2016 - 15:19

Nope ... there's a reverb on both drum tracks ... but that's the only reverb. Both are different types for different sounds. I wanted the drums huge in "You Monkeys" with a medium sized room reverb. With "Fallin" it's a very short plate. If I took it out most might not even notice.

The guitar(s) (Bass/Elec/Acou) went direct through their respective amps, and the keys are soft synths via midi in the DAW. There is no room sound to them. They weren't miked.

Vocals were individually close miked in "Fallin", all set to their cardioid pattern ... so they're not picking up much room sound either.

In "You Monkeys", the singers gathered around an omni mike to sing together ... but it would be there only while they're singing, and at no other time ... since I trim the tracks between the singing to reduce noise.

I'm puzzled by your comment ... accordingly.

kevinwhitect Sun, 10/30/2016 - 15:41

... which is perhaps even more confusing because the drums have their own room, and the vocals have 3 other rooms. :D

If I played back the vocal tracks, there'd be very little room sound ... due to the varied rooms and close miking employed. You may be objecting to my effect choices on them ... but really, there physically cannot be a lot of room sound on them ... plus it wouldn't carry through during the periods no singing occurs.

During such passages, since I did NOT apply any reverb globally, and everything (but drums) was direct in (no room), there is no room sound.

My guess, therefore, is you don't like the sound I've chosen for the reverb on the drums ... of which (particularly in You Monkeys) I saturated them a bit.

kevinwhitect Sun, 10/30/2016 - 16:37

Kurt Foster, post: 442789, member: 7836 wrote: hey Kevin, i'm not trying to diss you or the work. i am just hearing a room sound i don't care for much. but what do i know? i also hate hi tuned snares .... it's all a matter of taste. the songs and performances are nice however and that's what matters most imo.

Text is a very difficult way to discuss audio. I felt no diss. Only a puzzle created by text issues.

kevinwhitect Sun, 10/30/2016 - 16:43

audiokid, post: 442793, member: 1 wrote: [[url=http://[/URL]="https://soundcloud…"]Who We Are - You Monkeys[/]="https://soundcloud…"]Who We Are - You Monkeys[/] The hats, cymbals and crash are killing the track. Turn those down and I think the song would be better.

Agreed. I think the problem occurs in the mastering I employ. I know. I shouldn't self master ... but meh ... I'm a cheap bastard in a home studio doing it all myself.

The same issue doesn't occur in the original mix.

audiokid Sun, 10/30/2016 - 17:27

kevinwhitect, post: 442798, member: 11453 wrote: The same issue doesn't occur in the original mix.

Which is why I use two DAW's and mix into the master or more modernly put, the online mix. But that is another topic that I will refer here as a prime example.
That being said, if I may suggest why this particular issues is happening, and help.

  • You many be compressing this too much (which is bring up the brass freq). To get the same level, you still need to reduce your drums.
  • Your ears are fatigue in the upper mids.
  • Your monitoring is shy in the upper mids.

It could be one or all of these reasons but I do not believe your online master is adding to it.

Reduce (only) those percussive areas and then upload the mix again.

audiokid Sun, 10/30/2016 - 23:16

bouldersound, post: 442805, member: 38959 wrote: I think it's the mix, not the mastering

Exactly :) It is in the mix.
I'm one for small changes and not doing two things at once.Lets hear the reduction of those levels first.
If he fixes the cymbals and hats in the mix, his mastering will not change. I'd like to hear this fix it in the mix, and then master it the exact same way.

DonnyThompson Mon, 10/31/2016 - 06:22

audiokid, post: 442793, member: 1 wrote: [[url=http://[/URL]="https://soundcloud…"]Who We Are - You Monkeys[/]="https://soundcloud…"]Who We Are - You Monkeys[/] The hats, cymbals and crash are killing the track. Turn those down and I think the song would be better.

+1

What was your mic configuration on the drums - the types used and their placement - and how high is the ceiling in the room where you track the drums?

If that's the "natural" sound of the room, then you might want to look at recording them in another space, as it sounds pretty bad ( to me); and if that's more of an artificial reverb, you need to consider another type of verb, along with lessening the amount.

How hot did you track the drums? Or are you using a limiter on them - or on the 2 Bus - that's perhaps clipping? I picked up on some distortion here and there.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 12:36

audiokid, post: 442803, member: 1 wrote: Which is why I use two DAW's and mix into the master or more modernly put, the online mix. But that is another topic that I will refer here as a prime example.
That being said, if I may suggest why this particular issues is happening, and help.

  • You many be compressing this too much (which is bring up the brass freq). To get the same level, you still need to reduce your drums.
  • Your ears are fatigue in the upper mids.
  • Your monitoring is shy in the upper mids.

It could be one or all of these reasons but I do not believe your online master is adding to it.

Reduce (only) those percussive areas and then upload the mix again.

Hmmm ... compression is a bit light on the drums ... I will post up the original mixes w/ the percussion's overheads reduced.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 12:37

audiokid, post: 442806, member: 1 wrote: Exactly :) It is in the mix.
I'm one for small changes and not doing two things at once.Lets hear the reduction of those levels first.
If he fixes the cymbals and hats in the mix, his mastering will not change. I'd like to hear this fix it in the mix, and then master it the exact same way.

On its way. I'm in the studio now.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 12:46

DonnyThompson, post: 442809, member: 46114 wrote: +1

What was your mic configuration on the drums - the types used and their placement - and how high is the ceiling in the room where you track the drums?

If that's the "natural" sound of the room, then you might want to look at recording them in another space, as it sounds pretty bad ( to me); and if that's more of an artificial reverb, you need to consider another type of verb, along with lessening the amount.

How hot did you track the drums? Or are you using a limiter on them - or on the 2 Bus - that's perhaps clipping? I picked up on some distortion here and there.

Hi Donny!

I've got an SM7 on the kick. SM57 on the snare. CAD ICM 417 on the hhat. 2 Sennheiser e604's on the rack toms. A Senn 421 on the floor tom and 2 MXL 603s on the overheads.

Ceiling height is 8 ft ... room is roughly 12x14 ...

But on You Monkeys ... I did employ an artificial reverb w/ Cakewalk's Breverb ... and it is a noticeable effect.

When I post up the original mix ... I'll kill it so folks can hear what the drums sound like w/o it.

audiokid Mon, 10/31/2016 - 12:49

kevinwhitect, post: 442818, member: 11453 wrote: Hmmm ... compression is a bit light on the drums ... I will post up the original mixes w/ the percussion's overheads reduced.

Cool, I don't really think its compression in the mix.
Sometimes when mastering, using a limiter, hats and cymbals will stand out. But its not because of the mastering per-say that does that. Its still means your hats and cymbals in the mix are too loud.

I hope you don't change your mastering approach for this. Just turn down the percussion parts. Then lest listen to the mix again.

And to predict the next thing I would do after we hear this result,

Turn your lead vocal up a bit. I think your mix will then be ready for actual critiquing in a more refined way which is when it gets interesting.

audiokid Mon, 10/31/2016 - 13:09

kevinwhitect, post: 442825, member: 11453 wrote: I have reduced the hi hat and over heads in this sampling.

They sound as expected but without them in your original mix posted, this is useless to me. As far as your drum sound, I suppose it is what it is because they sound like a small room. I wouldn't even use them if I was trying to improve your mix.

I hope you simply add this to your original mix so we can hear how it improved it though.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 13:16

audiokid, post: 442828, member: 1 wrote: They sound as expected but without them in your original mix posted, this is useless to me. As far as your drum sound, I suppose it is what it is because they sound like a small room. I wouldn't even use them if I was trying to improve your mix.

I hope you simply add this to your original mix so we can hear how it improved it though.

I wanted folks to hear both the drums on their own ... and how they sound dry in the original mix. That's the second file I posted up. :D

The room itself is about 12-13x14-15 ... it's not a huge room, but not tiny either.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 13:24

Kurt Foster, post: 442830, member: 7836 wrote: Yes there it is. A bad sounding room. Can't you hear that early slap and unpleasant short reverb Kevin?

I'm pretty sure i hear the same room sound on the vocals too. post them sans music please.

On the drums? Yes. Now ask me if there's anything I can do about it. :D

The rest of the instruments are direct. No room sounds.

Vocals were recorded in three other separate rooms.

Listen to the a cappella at the beginning of Fallin' to hear. I'm not hearing huge influence there.

kevinwhitect Mon, 10/31/2016 - 13:47

It is what it is ... and I have to deal w/ it. That said ... putting the mikes in a cardioid pattern should have taken care of most of the room sound on the vocals. I've got the singers singing about 9 inches from the mic ... there's not going to be a lot of room sound that can get back in around the direct sound. Also ... as I said above, the minute the singing stops, the clips are clipped. There is no linger to the room sound on the vocals. It's not even there when the vocals aren't.

I get the drums having a room sound to them ... and I hear that ... my attempt to add effects was to mask the dryness of the tighter space.

I even hear it on my lead vocal in "Fallin" ... for I know what I did there (I recorded a tube mic in semi-omni mode for a flatter frequency response ... but with a surround on the mic to prevent rear reflections). But I'm hearing almost nothing on the other vocals ... as there should be mostly only direct sound w/ VERY little room to it ... even if it is three different spaces.

KurtFoster Mon, 10/31/2016 - 13:51

kevinwhitect, post: 442837, member: 11453 wrote: putting the mikes in a cardioid pattern should have taken care of most of the room sound on the vocals.

says who? you are making an incorrect assumption.

kevinwhitect, post: 442837, member: 11453 wrote: I get the drums having a room sound to them ... and I hear that ... my attempt to add effects was to mask the dryness of the tighter space.

well in the first place they have an ambiance to them so they are not "dry". adding effects only adds more ambiance. the trick is to record things that sound good in the first place, not to try and fix a bad sound later in the mix.

KurtFoster Mon, 10/31/2016 - 14:14

Kevin, it's very simple. not rocket science by any means. cardioid mics reject sounds from the rear. they still pick up on the sides and unless you have absorption on the walls any room will have reflections, some of which are still going to come from the sides and the direction of where the mic is pointed. you may assume anything but that's not going to make it true. just put the mics up in the room and record something. does it sound icky? room treatments to dampen the reflections is the answer. either that or record in a room that is large enough to yield more desirable reflections.

and i reiterate, the performances and the songs are nice and that's what most important. as a demo it's fine. i really doubt anY perspective client is going to say, "What the hell is that room sound?" :love:

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