Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 1,387 Likes: 9
President connoisseur
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OP
President connoisseur
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 1,387 Likes: 9 |
We did the recording in the anechoic chamber last month with Stephen and Chris from The Stephen Stanley Band. The theory was we could increase the realism of the playback experience if we did not cascade the room it was recorded in with the room it was played back in. 401Classic asked if we could send him the wave files. We did and this is what he produced from them: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1c3LpYN6zj3AmVikywf3OyOF4dmMyJsmT/view?usp=sharing Love to hear what you think.
Ian Colquhoun President & Chief Engineer
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117
shareholder in the making
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shareholder in the making
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117 |
I don't know what is meant by "...not cascade the room it was recorded in with the room it was played back in." And what did 401Classic do? It sounds great on my Audiobytes and I expect it will sound even more amazing on my ADA and v4 system.
House of the Rising Sone Out in the mid or far field Linearity and mid-woofers are over-rated
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 1,387 Likes: 9
President connoisseur
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OP
President connoisseur
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 1,387 Likes: 9 |
The chamber is a "non-room" as it has no reflective signature of its own. Technically then there is only one room in the equation which is your room that you are playing it back in.
Ian Colquhoun President & Chief Engineer
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117
shareholder in the making
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shareholder in the making
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117 |
It tells me my room and system is awesome and I have no business upgrading it...LOL! There's some hum in the beginning like ever-so-slight feedback. I hear 2 guitars in the intro. One is anchored to the right speaker and is 4' high. The other is 2' behind the left speaker and 1' towards the center. It's higher than the right by a half foot. These guitars stay there throughout the song although there is a guitar that pops in and out of the left speaker. The male singer comes in 2' behind the right speaker and 1' towards the center. He's right there! He sounds 5' tall. A female sings from time-to-time and she's anchored in the left speaker. Once towards the end a male sings over her. The main singer and guitars sound very clear and resonant like they're in my room. It sounds very "transparent". Please tell me this is all wrong so that I can continue to justify my upgrade.
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333
connoisseur
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connoisseur
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333 |
And what did 401Classic do? It sounds great on my Audiobytes and I expect it will sound even more amazing on my ADA and v4 system. Thanks! What I DIDN'T do was mix it and play it back in a room with decent speakers, I used a really nice set of custom IEMs, though. So I need to re-mix it with a room in mind. I will try to get an updated file to Amie and Ian probably by Wed, since all I need to do is re-pan a little and change the levels of a couple things. It sounds great on both my M22s and custom IEMs, but very different from each other. What I DID do is listen to all 8 tracks that I was given and I decided to eliminate a couple of the tracks because there were cleaner tracks with the same info. For instance there were 3 tracks of the electric guitar. Based on the pic earlier in this thread, I figured that two of them were the ones right on the amp and the third was a few feet away, but it also picked up the acoustic and both vocals (Mojo, the second vocal is a dude, so you may need an upgrade ). Guitar amps are famous for giving quite different signatures based on mic placement, even a few inches apart. Once I had the clean channels, I tried to create a soundstage with what I thought I was seeing in the picture - Lead Vocal playing acoustic and B/G vocal playing electric and panned them accordingly, more or less. For the Acoustic, I EQ'd a bump around 300 Hz and a negative peak at 2k Hz and panned it right to match the lead vocal. For the Electric, similar EQ, but I panned one track hard left and the other track just to the right and a light reverb on both. Lead vocal EQ has a bump around 400 Hz and negative spike around 6k Hz to help with sibilance. B/G vocal just got bump at 400Hz. Then the whole thing was run thru its own EQ, a Limiter, a binaural pan at 150% and a very slight reverb. One of the tracks seemed like the mic was in the middle of the room as just about everything was picked up. Ordinarily this would be the "Room the song was recorded in" but because the anechoic chamber sucked up all the natural echo and ambiance a regular room would lend, it was just a mic too far away from any one thing, so I did not include it in the mix. So what I can upload is: - Just the tracks, no nothing - EVERYTHING will be sitting dead center - Just the tracks, pan only - The Full Monte, redone on a room with M22s So there will be 4 versions to take a poll on. Scott
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117
shareholder in the making
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shareholder in the making
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117 |
Scott, nice work man! Can you share with us how the depth that I heard is achieved? Is the depth accurate?
BTW, I really was unsure if that was a guy or gal and should have reflected that in my notes instead of guessing.
I'm looking forward to hearing the various files.
House of the Rising Sone Out in the mid or far field Linearity and mid-woofers are over-rated
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333
connoisseur
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connoisseur
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333 |
Mojo,
I really have no freaking clue how to effect depth or height, for that matter. Your 'left here' and 'right there' comments are easy to explain and match the pan settings, but height? No clue. Maybe it's tied to the pan settings. For instance, in terms of pan settings in my DAW I noticed that the lead vocal is panned less than the acoustic. I basically closed my eyes and listened as I moved things left and right, stopping when I felt they were balanced and where I wanted them, not just a number on the DAW. That was on my IEMs. When I played it in my living room (after I sent a copy to Amie and Ian) that balance was different - and also reversed! Left was right and right was left. No clue what happened there. The guitar you mentioned that pops in and out is the second track of the Electric Guitar coming from a different mic placement on the amp and I panned it just off center and the opposite direction of the other EG track. It's sonically just different enough in certain phrases that you hear it as a different instrument in a different spot. I'll have to take a closer listen to the individual tracks again, but I'm pretty sure the hum you hear is the guitar amp. If I can pull it out without effecting the tone of the guitar, I will.
Scott
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117
shareholder in the making
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shareholder in the making
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 10,543 Likes: 117 |
I'm very curious about height and depth. The vast majority of music presents itself "up high" with my M80s. By that I mean the images float above the speakers. When I had the back of the M80s 6" from the wall, the images were in the same plane as the front of the drivers. I've now moved the back 3' away from the wall. The images are still up high but now I can finally perceive depth.
One of the exceptions is your file. Like I reported, I heard various heights and didn't have to strain at all to place the images in 3D space. I hear no depth in your file by the way when I move the 80s against the wall. Also the height and width are still preserved but are "fuzzier".
My listening desires have gotten more refined over the years. I can hear image fuzziness and spatial congestion that I couldn't hear even 2 years ago. I've purchased the M5HP to get the depth and image focus I yearn for. If the M5HP, and in general the v4, lead to improved imaging and soundstage spaciousness, then this is a secret that Axiom has protected very well. Maybe Axiom wants listeners to discover this for themselves.
It's a very interesting journey and experiment actually. It's not just about drivers and their materials, cabinet bracing and shape, port configuration and cross-over parts. It's how all these work as a system, or in the case of the LFRs, a system of systems. Trying to understand what measurements make a difference to human perception of sound and how those measurements need to be analyzed in context to the desired objectives is the real magic. Then of course synthesizing those measurements into a desirable product is another thing altogether.
I think this is what The Family of Curves is all about. Although many speaker manufacturers take curves, they may be hampered by the available equipment and methods. Axiom recognized a long time ago the need to invest in their own chamber and automation to increase the curve quantity and granularity. I hope all this work shines through in the M5HPs I'm about to receive.
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 334 Likes: 5
Axiom Engineer devotee
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Axiom Engineer devotee
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 334 Likes: 5 |
Very, very nice job 401! I have not listened to the raw files, but your mix is excellent in terms of tone and dynamics. My only criticism is with the panning placement. I think that it would be great to have Stephen centered along with his guitar and Chris and his guitar panned slightly to the right to provide some separation. Either that or maybe still have them left/right but both positioned closer to centre?
Andrew
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Re: Anechoic Chamber Recording
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Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333
connoisseur
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connoisseur
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,333 |
Hi Andrew,
I can certainly go back and put Stephen and the Acoustic(?) dead center with and the others off center. I uploaded, for Ian and Amie to approve, a version panned closer to center with the same processing I did before and one with the same pan but no additional processing, and also one with no pan or processing (so everything piled up in the middle).
Scott
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