They are discussiung philosophy about getting the best sound out of an instrument. Sometimes these discussion become religous. I have worked with people who think they are so right they can't hear how terrible the recording is. They do the same thing over and over and get the same bad results.
These folks are teaching what to think about and listen to when you are faced with different scenarios in the studio.
I be surprized if anyone complaing even has a mic or a guitar.
They are discussiung philosophy about getting the best sound out of an instrument. Sometimes these discussion become religous. I have worked with people who think they are so right they can't hear how terrible the recording is. They do the same thing over and over and get the same bad results.
These folks are teaching what to think about and listen to when you are faced with different scenarios in the studio.
I be surprized if anyone complaing even has a mic or a guitar.
Wow, can't believe how rude people are about this. You didn't pay for it, so stop complaining. This dude (the engineer) came to my uni to talk about mastering, and I thought he was very informative and interesting.
No offense to the authors, but most of your 5 videos was little more than useless fluff & really wasn't very helpful to me. I was hoping you'd discuss a variety of options for *mic* placement methods for recording acoustic guitar, etc, and this 5th video touched on that slightly (and far too vaguely), but honestly you guys really wasted far too much time chit-chatting about common sense issues such as "change the strings" or "use a good guitar". To-the-point would have been a better approach.
Wouldn't you get phasing problems with your two mics at such similar distances from the sound source?
crazyguitarist57 3 months ago
They are discussiung philosophy about getting the best sound out of an instrument. Sometimes these discussion become religous. I have worked with people who think they are so right they can't hear how terrible the recording is. They do the same thing over and over and get the same bad results.
These folks are teaching what to think about and listen to when you are faced with different scenarios in the studio.
I be surprized if anyone complaing even has a mic or a guitar.
Good work Gentlmen!
jblack547 4 months ago
They are discussiung philosophy about getting the best sound out of an instrument. Sometimes these discussion become religous. I have worked with people who think they are so right they can't hear how terrible the recording is. They do the same thing over and over and get the same bad results.
These folks are teaching what to think about and listen to when you are faced with different scenarios in the studio.
I be surprized if anyone complaing even has a mic or a guitar.
jblack547 4 months ago
This was my favorite video of the series, thanks!
TheOtherMic 6 months ago
Wow, can't believe how rude people are about this. You didn't pay for it, so stop complaining. This dude (the engineer) came to my uni to talk about mastering, and I thought he was very informative and interesting.
evildave9000 1 year ago
No offense to the authors, but most of your 5 videos was little more than useless fluff & really wasn't very helpful to me. I was hoping you'd discuss a variety of options for *mic* placement methods for recording acoustic guitar, etc, and this 5th video touched on that slightly (and far too vaguely), but honestly you guys really wasted far too much time chit-chatting about common sense issues such as "change the strings" or "use a good guitar". To-the-point would have been a better approach.
musicianfromcaliforn 1 year ago 2
Thanks. I really enjoyed this and I'm looking forward to the next 4 parts.
joolsoffools 1 year ago
wow...they took that long to tell us nothing we didn't already know...thanx fer nothing i didn't already know... :-(
squidskunk 1 year ago
I don't get it. This was the shortest, yet most informative of the series -and it ends short!
utfsal 2 years ago