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Re: [ARSCLIST] Pristine Audio (?!)



Tom & Doug,

A-men.

It amazes me how professional mastering engineers can be lured into over-processing. A couple of years ago I consulted for a major box-set re-issue and the original mastering (from a reputable house) on Cedar was full of digi-swish. I believe that they had just gotten the system and were a little knob-happy (something that I admit to be susceptible of when using a new piece of gear). I convinced them to back off a bit (although, alas, they never fixed the pitch drift).

As these tools become more commonplace and we learn to use them, we can only hope that these artifacts will be a thing of the past.

Marcos

Doug Pomeroy wrote:
Date:    Mon, 3 Dec 2007 06:02:58 -0500
From:    Tom Fine <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Pristine Audio (?!)

That sample track of Robert Johnson is full of digital hash in the treble, especially around the
slide guitar but also the upper notes of the voice. It sounds very bad, to my ears. I'll take the
record surface noise in the early 90's Sony reissue set over the digital hash any day. One man's
opinion ...


-- Tom Fine

Indeed. And the 5 minute MP3 file which contains excerpts from 8 tracks is even worse,
with painfully obvious misrepresentation of the timbre of the voice and guitar. It's is not
the result of MP3 compression, but an artifact of heavy-handed noise removal processing.
How could any engineer, who claims to work with classical music, possibly accept such
degraded audio?


More emperor's new clothes.

Doug Pomeroy
POMEROY AUDIO
Audio Restoration & Mastering Services
Transfers of metal masters, lacquers,
shellac and vinyl discs & tapes.


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