Hi all!
I'm an amateur using several different VSL libraries as well as Vienna MIR Pro 24. I have a couple of questions that are probably so basic that they are hardly worth the attention of most of you, but I thought I would just ask anyway. (Maybe the answers are a lot shorter and simpler than the questions)
So I'm starting to create my own pieces now, slowly discovering what sounds natural and what does not, in terms of arrangements. It's ongoing but at least it's going and I'm really enjoying it. There is another step though in the process where I get stuck, because I don't really know what to do.
Being an amateur, I will never produce audio for professional use. Instead the goal is to be able to send resulting audio file to friends and say "What do you think?" or maybe even post it on Facebook when I'm in a narcistic mood. I have come to understand that that means that you have to change your audio or mix or whatever in such a way that it translates well to other people’s devices they are using to listen to your audio. As it stands now, when I listen to the audio file on my own HiFi setup in the living room, it doesn’t sound very good (Denon AVR with Keff pilar speakers). Same goes for when I listen to it on the studio monitors (Yamaha HS-8). In both cases, random reference files from John Williams soundtracks sound much better.
My own file only sounds right when I listen to it on headphones (BeyerDynamic DT 880). On the studio monitors, three problems mainly: the strings sound too sharp and lack warmth, the low frequencies seem much to soft now (although these systems usually have no problem producing a good bass at all) and it sounds sort of muddy, like it has become much harder to distinguish the different instruments.
I’m using MIR Pro as the venue (Vienna Konzerthaus Grosser Sahl) and use the presets made by VSL for placement, width and EQ for all the different instruments. So basically I can’t really go wrong with that, right?
I have learned that:
- I should have mixed using the studio monitors and not the headphones
- All the other things should be handled in a set of changes referred to as mastering
I have tried a simple EQ on the main output to give the lower frequencies a boost and dim the high frequencies a bit. That gives a definite improvement on the studio monitors and the HiFi set, but now it sounds less good on the headphones, with too much base.
1) Is it not possible to create an audio file that translates well to both a Hifi set and headphones? Or have I done something wrong?
2) I’m wondering why I should even have to, given the fact that I’m using the different presets from VSL for EQ on each instruments. Is it common to have to make these kind of changes to the resulting audio file? EQ has a big impact on the realism of the sound of an instrument and I don’t want to mess up what VSL has taken so much time to perfect. I want to do it justice.
On many websites, compression is mentioned as a remedy to the muddiness. I read a lot about it and listened to many examples, but I’m wondering how much of all this really applies to the type of music we are making with the VSL libraries. The examples usually deal with modern music and “giving the bass drum more oomph” is not what I’m looking for. But, since there were a couple of high peaks that were annoying when listening on the monitors, I decided to give it a go anyway. Well, it worked to get those peaks down so I could get the overall loudness up. But it didn’t really improve the sound, though. Might as well have done this by changing the mix while using the monitors, as I should have done.
3) Do you guys use compression on the audio file or within Vienna Ensemble Pro maybe as a plugin on each separate instrument? Does it improve the sound? I have also heard people say that, when you have to use compression a lot with our type of music, you just didn’t control your velocity and/or mixing well enough and I’m sort of leaning to that opinion right now.
Another possible explanation for the muddiness might be that the stereo width seems to be larger in the John Williams reference files. So the instruments are spread apart more. To be honest, the stereo width in these files, could, in real life, only be achieved by standing right next to the conductor, which I’m sure isn’t allowed in the Grosser Sahl. :-) So I guess it is a type of realism that can only be heard in movies but not in concert halls. I could change the microphone position and place it right on top of the conductor and see what happens.
4) But I’m just curious how much stereo width you guys usually go for. Any comments?
5) Any other suggestions for solving the three main problems I have while listening through the studio monitors?
Thanks!