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Re: [ARSCLIST] 0.1 dB



Thanks for chiming in, Bob! I have quoted this example a few times without finding out your point of view. It's good that you remember it, and good to know it was our client who had the sharpest ears, or the most picky aesthetic preferences. I never meant to imply that a tenth dB is a routine adjustment! And with hardware processing it is common to have more difference than that between channels of a single unit...

However, since that day I am using much smaller increments when trying things in mixing and mastering my own projects, for example changing EQ one dB at a time rather than wildly turning things up or down. As a result I find myself getting to the ideal much faster than previously...

Hope you don't mind me saying that your fine examples have been among the most powerful lessons for me in audio, mentoring me to become a much better engineer... even if this entire topic is not really about archiving!

Thanks,

Lou

On Mar 25, 2006, at 11:44 AM, Bob Olhsson wrote:

Richard L. Hess" <arclists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

While not disagreeing with your premise, I have seen 1970s mastering
notes shoved into the tape box that had 0.1 dB step attenuator
settings on mastering equalizers. I suspect in those days they were
made with Daven step-attenuator (or similar) controls.

I should step up and say that I was the mastering engineer involved in Lou's project. Lots more was undoubtedly changing than simply a tenth of a dB.


There are very few devices or software routines that only change the parameters on the front dial while leaving every other aspect alone. In fact it's rare for the frequencies and gain settings to be all that exact including variations from unit to unit with hardware devices.

In this case, I heard a tiny change of the sort where I generally avoid introducing a signal processor. This was why we did a quick informal blind test. When I couldn't fool any of us in five or six tries, I accepted that she was hearing something we probably ought to go with.

--
Bob Olhsson Audio Mastery, Nashville TN
Mastering, Audio for Picture, Mix Evaluation and Quality Control
Over 40 years making people sound better than they ever imagined!
615.385.8051    http://www.hyperback.com


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