duh

Discussions on sound production outside the synthesizer such as mixing, processing, recording, editing and mastering.
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TrondC
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duh

Post by TrondC » Thu Dec 17, 2009 10:34 pm

you're all probably gonna laugh at me for this, but I tried a new approach with how I set uop levels on my gears.normally, I'd leave the master volume of my synths to about 40% and adjust the gain/level on the mixer. today, I turned the md and mono to max olume and lowered the gain... I couldn't believe it! what can only be described as "warmth" came streaming through my speakers... will leave it like that I think ;)

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Re: duh

Post by Syn303 » Thu Dec 17, 2009 10:39 pm

warmth!! are you sure it wasn't smoke coming out of your speakers?
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Re: duh

Post by Solderman » Thu Dec 17, 2009 10:57 pm

A possible explanation: If the software on the elektron devices translated volume into actual bit-depth pre-DAC, then less bits, hence less resolution, would occur at the output. Increasing voume would increase headroom in this case. OTOH, if the volume knob was an actual pot, post-DAC, then maybe there is a bit of psycho-acoustics going on, where perceived loudness is different, using different level settings at your mixer.
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Re: duh

Post by pflosi » Fri Dec 18, 2009 12:44 am

signal to noise ratio

always, ALWAYS use top volume on synths

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Re: duh

Post by TrondC » Fri Dec 18, 2009 7:01 am

pflosi wrote:signal to noise ratio

always, ALWAYS use top volume on synths
will do from now on :)

as for the sound, it was the same kind of improvement in sound I got from the tubes of my esx, the bassdrums came to life so to say, really a different sound in my ears, and in a good way :D

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Re: duh

Post by tallowwaters » Fri Dec 18, 2009 2:08 pm

pflosi wrote:signal to noise ratio

always, ALWAYS use top volume on digital synths
fixed.

An older analog is more likely to have a sweetspot in its volume range.
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Re: duh

Post by pflosi » Fri Dec 18, 2009 2:37 pm

yes, up to the top that is ;)

or sth is wrong with your OLD synth

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