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What Makes a Good Recording?:
Another rather abtruse aspect of recorded sound, this pertains to the recording's freedom of strain or irritation. Steve Weiman of Pro Musica (an Urbana, IL dealer) has found that most listeners can detect the difference, not so much on the basis of conscious aural cues as by what the sound does to their muscle set. Irritating sounds tend to cause involuntary muscle tension; easy sound allows relaxation while listening. 13. Quietness. Many professional recording engineers are, irrationally, far less tolerant of noise than they are of any other aspects of recorded sound. Some environmental noise is almost inevitable in any recording made before an audience, but tends to be less distracting to a listener familiar with the live-performance experience than to one who listens mainly to studio-made recordings. 14. Dynamic Range. It is quite possible to tape-record, without noise reduction, the full dynamic range of a large orchestra, but some hiss will be audible at listening levels approaching the originals. Dolby or dbx noise reduction will eliminate most of this. Volume compression—"gain riding"—is thus rarely necessary when recording with a two-mike pickup, even when "accent mikes" must be used. Balances and maximum recording level should be set beforehand and then left strictly alone. Only when recording pop groups, or closely-miked singers, is constant balance and level adjustment needed, and the word then is subtlety; the manipulations should not call attention to themselves unless that is their specific intent. A disc, for various reasons, cannot accommodate as wide a dynamic range as an original tape, but again there should be as little awareness as possible of the volume compression. Restricted dynamic range has the effect of reducing surface noise (because signal levels never get down to near the background noise), but it tends to strip choral and symphonic music of its emotional impact. As a matter of fact, few things are as frustrating to classical-music listeners as a crescendo which builds towards a climax, then "crests out" before it gets there. One technique for avoiding this—and one that more commercial recording companies should consider—is to have the conductor raise the level of the quietest passages, while allowing crescendos to go to full volume. This effectively holds dynamics to within a practical range without putting a cap on the crescendos. 15. The Gestalt. 16. Performance.
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