At 5/7/2007 06:02 AM, dhbailey wrote:
>But it's important to note that many of the people who got it right
>first time work with samples all the time -- the bigger question would
>be "If these recordings were played to the general public, would any of
>them guess that it wasn't live musicians playing? Would the average
>concert-goer, even, pick up on the reverberation issues or the
>non-matching vibrato issues?
I have regular 4" computer speakers, ie. not very good at reproducing music.
I have never worked with samples.
Sample 1: Sounds good, seems real to me.
Sample 2: It started out with something different, and I thought, maybe
this is the one, but by halfway through, it was sounding normal.
Sample 3: This is bad music. I'll bet this is the one.
Sample 4: Yep, this sounds normal.
I rarely listen to _any_ recorded music. To me, it seemed simple that #3
was bad.
I have been to live musicals where there was no pit band. The music played
there was far superior to this sample. But, I suppose the music could have
been recordings made from live musicians. There was a synthesizer guy
present, and some of the sounds were obviously from him.
(Theatre by the Sea, Portsmouth, NH)
Phil Daley < AutoDesk >
http://www.conknet.com/~p_daley
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