me too.bduffy wrote:Yep. I suck, got it wrong!
I have a different type of mix comparison coming up (already uploaded on my server in fact). I'll do it in a few days. It's a whole lot easier to tell the difference in that.
me too.bduffy wrote:Yep. I suck, got it wrong!
That was something I thought I noticed when I did a test: the only really discernable difference I could pick out was that the peaks seemed better behaved in the 96k version, so I was wondering if oversampling made compressors more accurate. Guess that's the case, eh?Kingston wrote:Funkybot's Evil Twin,
I'm now pretty sure the reason for the negligible difference between the two files of yours is simply the lack of very audible saturation and distortion. I've done 3 other high rate mixes last week and it soon became pretty clear it's not very useful for simple subtle corrective EQing. Compression transients benefit lots.
I'm really interested to hear how this works out.Kingston wrote:Funkybot's Evil Twin,
I'm now pretty sure the reason for the negligible difference between the two files of yours is simply the lack of very audible saturation and distortion. I've done 3 other high rate mixes last week and it soon became pretty clear it's not very useful for simple subtle corrective EQing. Compression transients benefit lots.
I'm thinking so, but I'm also going to venture to guess that it depends on the compressor. For instance I know Torben's MPL-1 uses oversampling in the detector, so I question how big of a difference would occur there at 44.1 vs. 88.2, but if a compressor didn't already feature this, I can see where it would benefit from operating at a higher rate. Daniel's TLS 2095-LA though, is apparently locked at 44.1 internally, so if I understand that correctly, it will respond the same at 44.1 as it would at a higher rate. Basically, I guess it's all up to design. In my example, Marquis and GCO-1 may very well have benefited from the oversampling.bduffy wrote:That was something I thought I noticed when I did a test: the only really discernable difference I could pick out was that the peaks seemed better behaved in the 96k version, so I was wondering if oversampling made compressors more accurate. Guess that's the case, eh?Kingston wrote:Funkybot's Evil Twin,
I'm now pretty sure the reason for the negligible difference between the two files of yours is simply the lack of very audible saturation and distortion. I've done 3 other high rate mixes last week and it soon became pretty clear it's not very useful for simple subtle corrective EQing. Compression transients benefit lots.
Right...interesting... that's kind of what I was thinking too. Personally, I'm torn right now; I've gone and upsampled/stem mixed half my songs now, but it's freakin' tiring and I need to wrap this album up, so I might walk away from stem mixing. I do enjoy the freedom of stem mixing, though.Funkybot's Evil Twin wrote:I'm thinking so, but I'm also going to venture to guess that it depends on the compressor. For instance I know Torben's MPL-1 uses oversampling in the detector, so I question how big of a difference would occur there at 44.1 vs. 88.2, but if a compressor didn't already feature this, I can see where it would benefit from operating at a higher rate. Daniel's TLS 2095-LA though, is apparently locked at 44.1 internally, so if I understand that correctly, it will respond the same at 44.1 as it would at a higher rate. Basically, I guess it's all up to design. In my example, Marquis and GCO-1 may very well have benefited from the oversampling.bduffy wrote:That was something I thought I noticed when I did a test: the only really discernable difference I could pick out was that the peaks seemed better behaved in the 96k version, so I was wondering if oversampling made compressors more accurate. Guess that's the case, eh?Kingston wrote:Funkybot's Evil Twin,
I'm now pretty sure the reason for the negligible difference between the two files of yours is simply the lack of very audible saturation and distortion. I've done 3 other high rate mixes last week and it soon became pretty clear it's not very useful for simple subtle corrective EQing. Compression transients benefit lots.
Yeah, I think I'm going to hold off on upgrading my computer for a couple more months, to see if I can afford a PC then that can comfortably handle 88.2khz projects. But, I did just buy an RME Fireface 800, if the converters do end up providing a really noticable improvement over my old ones, maybe I won't feel like I need 88.2.bduffy wrote:I think for me, bottom line: next album starts at 88.2khz.
Yeah, I talk the tough talk, but that would mean losing half the processing power, or making bounce-decisions earlier. Maybe the next one will be an acoustic-based, intimate affair...(yeah, right!Funkybot's Evil Twin wrote:Yeah, I think I'm going to hold off on upgrading my computer for a couple more months, to see if I can afford a PC then that can comfortably handle 88.2khz projects. But, I did just buy an RME Fireface 800, if the converters do end up providing a really noticable improvement over my old ones, maybe I won't feel like I need 88.2.bduffy wrote:I think for me, bottom line: next album starts at 88.2khz.
+2.Kingston wrote:You know I could build you the tube preamp of your dreams.
...for a fee.(not kidding actually.)
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