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cvsound
 
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Default difference between analog mixing and digital mixing

I have tried to mix the same project (a live orchestra recording
recorded with 2 Neumann KM130s' and 1 KM83), both with the Samplitude
V6.0 in the computer, and also brought the whole project to analog
using a good Mytek DAC then mixed through a Millennia Mixing Suite.
The analog mix sounded more dimensional, and the mics sounded fuller.
Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.

Eric
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George Gleason
 
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cvsound wrote:
I have tried to mix the same project (a live orchestra recording
recorded with 2 Neumann KM130s' and 1 KM83), both with the Samplitude
V6.0 in the computer, and also brought the whole project to analog
using a good Mytek DAC then mixed through a Millennia Mixing Suite.
The analog mix sounded more dimensional, and the mics sounded fuller.
Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.

Eric


The analogue is less accurate making small errors on your part less obvious
it also adds more distortion(distortion being a abberation of the base
signal, for good or bad)
george
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George Gleason
 
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cvsound wrote:
I have tried to mix the same project (a live orchestra recording
recorded with 2 Neumann KM130s' and 1 KM83), both with the Samplitude
V6.0 in the computer, and also brought the whole project to analog
using a good Mytek DAC then mixed through a Millennia Mixing Suite.
The analog mix sounded more dimensional, and the mics sounded fuller.
Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.

Eric


The analogue is less accurate making small errors on your part less obvious
it also adds more distortion(distortion being a abberation of the base
signal, for good or bad)
george
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Arny Krueger
 
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"cvsound" wrote in message
om

I have tried to mix the same project (a live orchestra recording
recorded with 2 Neumann KM130s' and 1 KM83), both with the Samplitude
V6.0 in the computer, and also brought the whole project to analog
using a good Mytek DAC then mixed through a Millennia Mixing Suite.
The analog mix sounded more dimensional, and the mics sounded fuller.
Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.


Sure, anybody who thinks that they are going to make the same identical mix
on two different mixers at two different times, or even the same mixer at
two different times, really needs to step back and think at their work.
Mixing just isn't that precise.

If you need to understand this better, just play a pure sine wave through
your mixer, and try to set a fader to - infinity and then *the same* level
twice in a row by ear, without peeking. Measure the actual level you set
each time. Your two levels will probably be 0.5 dB or more apart. That's
more than enough to unintentionally create differences in soundstaging.


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Arny Krueger
 
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"cvsound" wrote in message
om

I have tried to mix the same project (a live orchestra recording
recorded with 2 Neumann KM130s' and 1 KM83), both with the Samplitude
V6.0 in the computer, and also brought the whole project to analog
using a good Mytek DAC then mixed through a Millennia Mixing Suite.
The analog mix sounded more dimensional, and the mics sounded fuller.
Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.


Sure, anybody who thinks that they are going to make the same identical mix
on two different mixers at two different times, or even the same mixer at
two different times, really needs to step back and think at their work.
Mixing just isn't that precise.

If you need to understand this better, just play a pure sine wave through
your mixer, and try to set a fader to - infinity and then *the same* level
twice in a row by ear, without peeking. Measure the actual level you set
each time. Your two levels will probably be 0.5 dB or more apart. That's
more than enough to unintentionally create differences in soundstaging.




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Blind Joni
 
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Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.

Eric


Digital misses out high frequencies often, I think.


More likely harmonics and such added by the analog circuitry...it started out
in the DAW.




John A. Chiara
SOS Recording Studio
Live Sound Inc.
Albany, NY
www.sosrecording.net
518-449-1637


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Blind Joni
 
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Can someone explain the reason. Thanks.

Eric


Digital misses out high frequencies often, I think.


More likely harmonics and such added by the analog circuitry...it started out
in the DAW.




John A. Chiara
SOS Recording Studio
Live Sound Inc.
Albany, NY
www.sosrecording.net
518-449-1637
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