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    The 3d plots on the sleeve:

    http://www.music-town.de/cgi-bin/mtshop/tools/showimage.cgi?image=http://www.music-town.de/shop/images/artikel/popup/ppv_akustik.jpg"Akustik und musikalische Aufführungspraxis"Author: Dr.-Ing. Jürgen MeierVerlag das Musikinstrument

    This book is a standard work every engineer knows, and a module at every university which educates engineers. Even my American Engineer has this book.


  • Angelo,

    OK your editing your posts alot so i may be responding to things others may not be able to read but bare with me. The 3-D plot makes perfect sense based on the link you gave. Thanks a lot. If this information has been documented as described I really should riot at the schools in which I studied. I feel that this was completely ignored. I would love if you could post up any of these charts describing the maximum output level of each instrument in an orchestral context/seating in DB's. This would help me immensely in finding a common ground to start working from with sample slike VSL.

    Thanks again!

    Rob


  • Rob,

    this publication has several hundret pages, and I can't scan the book to a PDF, I have no right to do that.

    My edition is from 1972. Jürgen Meier extended the book in 2004 with room related information and with level information between orchestra and singer.

    I am 100% certain that this knowledge is part of the curriculum at every university with a technical faculty, world wide.

    .


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    @CommanderFunk_28576 said:

    OK your editing your posts alot so i may be responding to things others may not be able to read but bare with me.

    Not that I do that on purpose, but the new text formating of this Message board does not accept the formating from my text editor WinWord

     

  • Angelo,

    Sorry I didn't mean to imply that you would scan the entire book. I think all were asking for here is a small table of data. I guess it's common knowledge and I don't doubt you. Soooo if you could simply post a chart that would be great. One you've made or data you could simply type in. Either way it would be greatly appreciated!

    Thanks!

    Rob


  • Oh and no problem about editing the posts thing. I just was worried you'd delete one I responded to and it would confuse the other readers. All fine though!


  • Angelo, what would be a "Standard work every engineer knows" in english be? Do you have recommendations of a book to buy? Thanks.

    Colin Thomson 


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    @Angelo Clematide said:

    Okay, let’s assume I would write down this level values for each instrument, for example from Hans Werner Henze’s Sinfonie Nr. 1. At what points should I measure the level, and how would you apply the collected data to your music?

     

    Quite easy: Imagine, you are Hans Werner Henze, standing in front of the orchestra, ready to start playing. Then U say: "Stop! I want every single instrument or section (such as the HO-4) play its loudest note allone!" Result: If the VI-16_mV play the loudest possible G3 at - 13 db, the VA-10_mV reach a peak of - 16 db, the single horn reaches - 20 db and so on. If U transfer this situation to your setup: U have everything set to start composing (all volumes, reverbs, pans, etc.). Even if U plan to automate your volume faders afterwards, it is still a setup, U consider to be a good mix to start with, no matter what velocity the single instruments might play later. So as soon as you are confident with your mix, stop it at any time of your work to check, what maximum peak every single instrument is able to play. Then all people like me would have something very good to start with, because I would just have to adjust the volume levels. In my situation, not knowing the relative levels, I might set the HO-4 volume fader too loud and later on balance that in a false way by letting them play mf instead of ff. Do you see my point?

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    @Felix Bartelt said:

    Quite easy: Imagine, you are Hans Werner Henze, standing in front of the orchestra, ready to start playing. Then U say: "Stop! I want every single instrument or section (such as the HO-4) play its loudest note allone!" Result: If the VI-16_mV play the loudest possible G3 at - 13 db, the VA-10_mV reach a peak of - 16 db, the single horn reaches - 20 db and so on. If U transfer this situation to your setup: U have everything set to start composing (all volumes, reverbs, pans, etc.). Even if U plan to automate your volume faders afterwards, it is still a setup, U consider to be a good mix to start with, no matter what velocity the single instruments might play later. So as soon as you are confident with your mix, stop it at any time of your work to check, what maximum peak every single instrument is able to play. Then all people like me would have something very good to start with, because I would just have to adjust the volume levels. In my situation, not knowing the relative levels, I might set the HO-4 volume fader too loud and later on balance that in a false way by letting them play mf instead of ff. Do you see my point?

    A-HA - We are not talking about the same matter.

    I see now what you mean, but that is what we call absolute dynamic (Felix sez: "play its loudest note"). But there is a difference between absolute and relative dynamic.


  • Relative dynamic of a musical instrument is the total loudness range. For example measured over the full range, and each step played as soft as possible plus as loud as possible. This aquired dynamic data can be presented in envelope graph (for example as in Jürgen Meie book "Akustik und musikalische Aufführungspraxis"). This data helps the engineer to place the microphone at the proper spot in various recording situations.

    There are several reasons why relative and absolute dynamic data would be unsatisfying in build a dynamic orchestra default setting. One of the main reasons is what is called "distant cue in closed rooms" - this is the spatial information stored in a stereophonic recoding who tells us how far away the source is.


  • Sorry, didn´t know that. So I guess I´m talking about the relation of the single absolute peaks to eachother. Knowing this would really help a lot to have something to start with. As I said: I can get my mix balanced quite o.k., but I might be doing it in a wrong way, cause I choose instruments to play pianissimo having the level of a forte, because I set a too high volume level. I´m o.k. with reverb and eq settings, but I don´t see myself able to make the right volume level setup, by listening to references, cause I have no idea, if the flute, I´m hearing, is playing mf or forte or if it´s even two flutes playing. That´s why I hope to get some help from orchestra guys, knowing, what peak every single instrument is able to reach in a common orchestral seating. Since I like any of your mixes, the peaks of any of your songs would help.

  • I agree with what Felix is asking for. I don't think Angelo has this information though. If he did he would have simply posted it by now. The debates about WHY this information wouldn't be accurate or helpful are drifting further into obscurity. If anyone does have this information though please share it with us. It would be enormously helpful as many have pointed out.

    Thanks!

    Rob


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    @CommanderFunk_28576 said:

    I agree with what Felix is asking for. I don't think Angelo has this information though. If he did he would have simply posted it by now. The debates about WHY this information wouldn't be accurate or helpful are drifting further into obscurity. If anyone does have this information though please share it with us. It would be enormously helpful as many have pointed out.

    Thanks!

    Rob

    No, I don't have this information. I think nobody ever made this measurements.

    I guess what you want is, that some one writes down the values from the software meter for each orchestra instrument playing the loudest possible sound when the recording setup is one stereo microphone in a concert hall. The measurement in the mentioned book "Akustik und musikalische Aufführungspraxis" is not made in that way, but each instrument is measured from same distance, similar as the VSL samples are made.

    .


  • Hey Angelo,

    Those measurements may be useful though as well. VSL was normalized so your data would be very helpful. You could calculate the diff. and let the panning/narrowing reverb etc take care of the rest. It would require more tweaking but what you describes sounds like it would be great!

    Thanks again!

    Rob


  • "The debates about WHY this information wouldn't be accurate or helpful are drifting further into obscurity."

    Oh, No!  We can't have that!!

    Ahem, to illuminate:

    Two reasons why a standardized environment is moot:

    1.  Every mix is different.  There is not one environment.  There is not one method of recording an orchestra.  There is not one method of mic'ing an orchestra.  There is not one method of playing each instrument.  There are as many dynamic ranges of an instument or ensemble as there are players and ensembles.

    2.  Sample mockups with VSL are especially variable (and customizable=this is GOOD) because of the normalized, silent stage process.  Why limit yourself by Standardizing (bastardizing) variables, thus limiting the potential?

    CAVEAT:

    This does not mean that you can't have a "starting point."  For me, this means setting up general levels at -15 to -20 (in Logic), general pannng, general reverb type and level, etc.

    The only other exception is if you want to emulate a particular recording.  To which I say, Listen, Listen, Listen.  Take the time to get the same reverb, e.q., DYNAMIC RANGE, and everything else.  Then make a template from that that says "John Williams Jaws Temp" or whatever.

    Liberty and Freedom for all!

    Clark


  • Think about it: Dynamic Range is a non-issue.  Every recording ever made has been subjected to (tape or channel) compression, mixing of near and far mics, soloist gets their mic raised for eight bars then ducked down again.  Newer recordings are 20-100 tracks.  Probably all automated and compressed with extra reverb, e.q., EVERYTHING.

    If you don't have the ears or arranging sensabilities to understand how instruments blend or behave together you need to go back to school.

    Clark


  • Before I get flamed I would like to admit that ranges could be HELPFUL, but hardly definitive. Missing the forest for the trees, so to speak. Context will change everything. That is why there are no measurements that Felix and others are interested in seeing. Unless you made these measurements with every symphony on every stage with every microphone with every preamp in every style of playing every instrument. Respectfully rebelious, Clark

  • WTF? First I can't edit my post then there are no paragraphs. GRRRR. ---Last sentence should start with "It would only be definitive if...(you made these measurements with every symphony...)"

  • Sorry for all the posts, guys, can't edit.------While you all want to know how this all operates in context on stage, don't forget that it all falls apart when we talk about range vs. dynamics, timbre vs. dynamics, and how this is manipulated in real time IN CONTEXT OF THE MUSIC by a professional musician to balance chords/textures.

  • To be honest, this discussion about having the startup levels being useful or not, let´s me think, that there are other reasons for not telling the levels. Don´t get me wrong! I think it´s absolutely o.k. to keep some mixing secrets and most of you guys gave more hints, I expected to get.

    But: Please don´t come up with the same arguments like, every mix is different or listen to orchestrations yourself!

    1. Not all instruments of VSL have the right level and the right level relation to eachother out of the box. (Example: Solo violin compared to VI-16). So every instrument may be changed in master output level, may it be, by using the volume fader, by changing the position in altiverb, by EQ, whatever. Fact is, that in your master output not all of your VSL tracks will have the same relation in peak to eachother as they had directly after being loaded out of the box into your audio instrument track.

    2. The relation of the level peaks may be different from song to song. I don´t care, cause I don´t ask for every level setting of every type of orchestral setup. I´d just like to have something to start with. So just take a normal orchestral song like the one Angelo took to show the dynamics as our example setup song. Then check the level peaks, so we beginners know, that these peaks in that kind of music would be a good start. Or post any song and tell the peaks of that song.

    3. No matter if a template is useful or not: I don´t want to have the perfect template. I just need something to start with. Once again: I can get two instruments in balance. But I might be doing it wrong cause I chose the wrong start volume levels. I can make a pp VI-16 sound as loud as a full ff chord of the whole rest of the orchestra, if I chose a very high volume level for the VI-16 and very low levels for all other instruments.

    And I hope U agree that I would get a wrong timbre, because of chosing wrong level peak relations.

    So how can one doubt, that this information would help!?!

    4. It´s not right, that no one hast this information. Actually in my actual orchestal song, it would take me about two minutes to get it:

    I´d just have to take a mix, that I like, click thru the single instruments, play the loudest note and write down the volume peak of every instrument at my master output. (Once again: It would not matter to me, how you got to this peak and if instrument x has a lower peak than others because instruments have different reverb settings.It´s just one thing, helping a lot.)

    I hope, this time I explaind better, what I would like to get hints about, since Angelo and I seemed to be talking about different things.

    Thanks for your help anyway.