@hermitage59 said:
Spartacus.
Check your weapon!
Regards,
Alex.
[H]
Sorry - that was Dirty Harry actually. Right State - wrong city. [:O]ops: [:'(]
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@cwillsher said:
So, mighty Thor, tell us how I should eliminate the room sound from QLSO?
You must have a 'tweak' for that? [[;)]]
@William said:
Mighty Thor is leaving out the main point concerning room tone in VSL vs. EW - of course VSL has room tone since it is physically impossible not to, however it is a minimized or dry one, which can be covered or altered by reverb. Unlike EW which has it as a main feature and is "Frozen" within it..
Room sound...its not a matter of taste, its a fact - its there ! It's a matter of taste if you like it or not...but its there. At this point I have found EQ and reverb settings to deal with it but it can be annoying
Room sound...of course it's there and I actually think that's a good thing as recording the instruments completely dry would have ruined the sound. The room is just not as dominating as if the samples were recorded in a concert hall. For me the small room gives more possibilities as I'm also using VSL for other things like pop etc where a concert hall ambience just wouldn't work as well (In My Very Humble Opinion). [:)]
/Mattias
@dpcon said:
Since tons and tons of sessions with orchestral instruments (say strings) have been done in Rooms over the last 75 years, VSL is the ideal sounding library for such. I don't know any Frank Sinatra records done with the LSO. Or Usher for that matter.
Very silly argument. I've done strings arrangements for well known artists and they were completely floored by the sound of VSL's strings: which were not generic pads or high string lines but linear polyphonic full sections. It would be totally inappropriate and unprofessional to deliver the parts married to some hall verb - I mean it just wouldn't work.
A good example is Sonic Implants - they have a great Room sound, still flexible and not too wet -
@William said:
Thor,
You seem to be operating on the principle that ONLY reverb recorded at the same time as the sample, then reproduced with release samples, is valid.
Is that what you think? I am trying to understand your problem here.
Thor,
I won't write a lengthy post since I TOTALLY agree with what you said and have said it myself in the past but not as eloquintly as you have. [[;)]]
Cheers!
Guy
.....but if you have any experience standing in front of a real orchestra...if pop if classical if Film - the room that they are recorded in is always a crucial element of the sound - they never get recorded as dry as possible