After Nick Batzdorf posted a question or two of mine in his excellent VI magazine, i got to thinking about early reflections, and their importance in the overall soundscape, so i thought i'd ask some of the experts here how they put this together.
Recording a single instrument means one set of 'reflections'.
But 'performing', recording, and mixing an ensemble presents a different challenge, that of the 'interaction' of early reflections from more than one instrument playing at the same time. And i don't mean a section, recorded in situ, but as one 'performs.'
How do you chaps mix and 'sculpt' an ensemble 'mutiple early reflection', with all the blending and collisions, within a digital soundscape, as if all the instruments are perfoming in the same 'hall' at the same time?
Can one 'bleed' a little of each track into others and hope to capture, at least partially, the overall reflections that are produced, in addition to, and as a result of, a combination of the more defined single instrument reflections? I can't see how this bleed process can happen digitally, but if there's a way to do this, or some other method that is used, then i'm all ears. (no pun intended.)
I've also studied a little about convolution, and even then with the placement possible, i don't see how the 'reflective ensemble interaction' can take place in a digital format.
Regards,
Alex.
Recording a single instrument means one set of 'reflections'.
But 'performing', recording, and mixing an ensemble presents a different challenge, that of the 'interaction' of early reflections from more than one instrument playing at the same time. And i don't mean a section, recorded in situ, but as one 'performs.'
How do you chaps mix and 'sculpt' an ensemble 'mutiple early reflection', with all the blending and collisions, within a digital soundscape, as if all the instruments are perfoming in the same 'hall' at the same time?
Can one 'bleed' a little of each track into others and hope to capture, at least partially, the overall reflections that are produced, in addition to, and as a result of, a combination of the more defined single instrument reflections? I can't see how this bleed process can happen digitally, but if there's a way to do this, or some other method that is used, then i'm all ears. (no pun intended.)
I've also studied a little about convolution, and even then with the placement possible, i don't see how the 'reflective ensemble interaction' can take place in a digital format.
Regards,
Alex.