Sascha Franck
Rock Star
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- 9,068
This is 100% false.
You don't seem to have much of an idea of live sound.
This is 100% false.
Yes I do.You don't seem to have much of an idea of live sound.
Yes I do.
I've spent 18 years working with e-kits, drum samples, and being involved in measuring, analysing, recording, editing, and producing products that revolve around exactly this kind of phenomenon.
Wrong.Clearly not.
Wrong.Completely irrelevant for live.
Wrong.Which my comment was about. But you seem to blissfully ignore that.
If you are in a venue large enough (or outdoors), then nearly any drummer and band can be made to sound great.Serious question: how do you explain all the amazing-sounding shows so many of us have seen over the past few decades, with real amps, real drums, etc?
None at all. Doesn't seem to have a clue what goes into making a good FOH mix.You don't seem to have much of an idea of live sound.
Man, I am lucky! so many good drummers I've had the privilege of seeing over the last 30+ years.If you are in a venue large enough (or outdoors), then nearly any drummer and band can be made to sound great.
In smaller venues with smaller stages where the drums must be close to vocal mics, it will only sound good if the drummer keeps his volume under control, otherwise the cymbals and snare will drown out the vocals and the FOH will be a mess.
I have heard some fantastic performances, MOST of them were done with acoustic drums..... but of the really horrible performances I have seen (horrible due to a very bad mix) the mix was ruined by loud cymbals, snare, and sometimes tube amps.
Not at golf clubs anyway.None at all. Doesn't seem to have a clue what goes into making a good FOH mix.
It is very music dependent. Go and watch Mogwai, Mono, or And So I Saw You From Afar, and try and pretend that sonic subtleties are not audible. If you're just bullshitting your way through Summer of 69, yeah sure... probably no one gives a shit.While all these subtle sonic things are interesting, the idea that anyone could hear such things in a mix in a club is just silly IMO.
I have demonstrated I can hear differences between those pieces of equipment in a recorded mix. I see no reason why it wouldn't be possible to diffrentiate betweem them in a live mix either.I will give it to @Orvillain, he is consistent as he also believes that he could hear the difference between a Kemper, Axe III Fx, and a real tube amp in a live setting because of subtle nuances.
My belief is you need to know the room and the music you're mixing, before you even pick up a mic or plug in a cable. Also, again the word is 'bleed' - basic English skills elude you, and you expect us to take you seriously?My personal belief is that you need a good clean sound stage first without so much mic blead as to doom the mix. You also need good talent as no amount of gear is going to make a crappy musician suddenly sound good (especially the vocals).
Everyone has heard a great band have bad live sound. When my friend and I went to see Tool a few years ago in the Wembley O2 Arena, I had a fantastic time. He went two nights in a row, and the first night was seated far away from the stage, and very high up top. His sound was primarily coming from the corner fills in that part of the venue. He described the sound as an abortion. The worst he's ever heard, and it ruined the gig for him. The second night he was in a completely different spot, down on the floor, and it sounded fantastic.Even a fantastically talented band will sound bad if the mix is crap though. I have seen this many times and it is heart wrenching since you can tell the musicians are very talented. Such a shame that their mix is such crap that the audience can't hear just how good they are.
Not anywhere. You simply lack the basic knowledge to get good FOH sound.... and worse, you believe that you do.... and why? Because you worked on a piece of musical equipmentNot at golf clubs anyway.
There are way more bands out there playing "Summer of 69" every weekend than "And So I Say You From Afar". I suppose if you are that .0001% of bands that do, then yea, those subtleties are important.It is very music dependent. Go and watch Mogwai, Mono, or And So I Saw You From Afar, and try and pretend that sonic subtleties are not audible. If you're just bullshitting your way through Summer of 69, yeah sure... probably no one gives a shit.
You have demonstrated nothing.... other than you can't spell and are a hypocrite.I have demonstrated I can hear differences between those pieces of equipment in a recorded mix. I see no reason why it wouldn't be possible to diffrentiate betweem them in a live mix either.
I have seen a very large stadium covered with really good sound on many occasions. Tool needs to get a better sound company, or pay for better equipment. While there are certainly positions in a venue where sound is better than others, most well funded events manage to sound pretty consistent throughout the arena ..... surprisingly so IMO.What ruined his experience was precisely the FOH mix, his positioning in the venue, and the fact that (IMHO!!!) the venue is too big for a band like that.
it will only sound good if the drummer keeps his volume under control, otherwise the cymbals and snare will drown out the vocals and the FOH will be a mess.
I have heard some fantastic performances, MOST of them were done with acoustic drums..... but of the really horrible performances I have seen (horrible due to a very bad mix) the mix was ruined by loud cymbals, snare, and sometimes tube amps.
End your terrible machinations, before your soul is lost. The Lord doesn't want this for you.Not anywhere. You simply lack the basic knowledge to get good FOH sound.... and worse, you believe that you do.... and why? Because you worked on a piece of musical equipment
There are way more bands out there playing "Summer of 69" every weekend than "And So I Say You From Afar". I suppose if you are that .0001% of bands that do, then yea, those subtleties are important.
You have demonstrated nothing.... other than you can't spell and are a hypocrite.
I have seen a very large stadium covered with really good sound on many occasions. Tool needs to get a better sound company, or pay for better equipment. While there are certainly positions in a venue where sound is better than others, most well funded events manage to sound pretty consistent throughout the arena ..... surprisingly so IMO.
I have had instances like you mention though. It's not that it isn't possible to get good coverage, it is that sometimes the job gets botched IMO.
The difference in a smaller venue with a bad mix and out of control stage volume is that it pretty much sounds like crap to everyone everywhere in the audience.
He never does. My comment on page 1 has still gone ignored. He's a troll. He's wasting his life trolling on forums instead of doing something that will appease the voices.You didn’t respond to my answer to your last question
Not at golf clubs anyway.
It is very music dependent. Go and watch Mogwai, Mono, or And So I Saw You From Afar, and try and pretend that sonic subtleties are not audible. If you're just bullshitting your way through Summer of 69, yeah sure... probably no one gives a shit.
I have demonstrated I can hear differences between those pieces of equipment in a recorded mix. I see no reason why it wouldn't be possible to diffrentiate betweem them in a live mix either.
My belief is you need to know the room and the music you're mixing, before you even pick up a mic or plug in a cable. Also, again the word is 'bleed' - basic English skills elude you, and you expect us to take you seriously?
Everyone has heard a great band have bad live sound. When my friend and I went to see Tool a few years ago in the Wembley O2 Arena, I had a fantastic time. He went two nights in a row, and the first night was seated far away from the stage, and very high up top. His sound was primarily coming from the corner fills in that part of the venue. He described the sound as an abortion. The worst he's ever heard, and it ruined the gig for him. The second night he was in a completely different spot, down on the floor, and it sounded fantastic.
An electronic drumkit would not have fixed his experience. An amp modeller would not have fixed his experience. A silent stage would not have fixed his experience.
What ruined his experience was precisely the FOH mix, his positioning in the venue, and the fact that (IMHO!!!) the venue is too big for a band like that. Buuuttt... they made a lot of money that tour, so as we've established in this thread, if you make money, then that fully establishes you as a reputable source on live sound engineering.
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I see no reason why it wouldn't be possible to diffrentiate betweem them in a live mix either.
This should theoretically disqualify you from an informed discussion. Practically, you will go on, though.
You guys never state WHY someone should be disqualified from the discussion, why would that be in this case?