> Oh dear, sorry to upset you, Robert. I _do_ recognise the value of pink
> noise and I've used it plenty of times myself for exactly the reasons you
> give. However, I don't regret a bit what I said about the far greater
> value
> of real instrumental recordings for these sorts of purposes. Pink noise is
> indeed a very sensitive test of timbral alterations - but just how
> important is that in the context of recording real instruments?

Maybe not (or maybe) much.

But all the poor chap is saying (if I get the message) is that if we are
serious we might measure it !

The exact polar pattern of a cardiod mic probably makes little difference
... bur manufacturers do publish them ....

Michael

> I've
> certainly heard very "real" sounding recordings which I know must have had
> timbral modifications but without very close and careful listening they
> have not been at all obvious - and I'm sure everyone else who's done any
> recording will have observed the same.
>
>    Dave
>
> On 5 July 2013 17:20, Robert Greene <gre...@math.ucla.edu> wrote:
>
>>
>> Hugely long. But one point cries out for comment:
>> It is simply nonsense to say that it would not
>> be useful to have the results
>> available for pink noises sources at various
>> spots on the stage recorded via various microphone
>> positions. It is well known and completely established
>> that pink noise is a very good indicator of general
>> tonal character. It is for instance by far the most
>> reliable identification tag for different loudspeakers
>> or different EQ settings. That one can become
>> fatigued--take a break occasionally!
>>
>> This is just not true to say that this would not give
>> a lot of information.
>>
>> In fact, David's whole response is just more
>> of the kind of argumentation that prevents
>> audio from getting anywhere. People seem
>> unable to understand how analyitical thought works.
>> One starts with simple situations and answerable
>> questions: What does this microphone technique
>> do to the frequency response of a standaidzed source
>> located at various positions?
>>
>> It is silliness to say that this is not information.
>> It is also silliness to say that this is the
>> only information one needs. But the former silliness
>> is worse because no one would think the latter.
>>
>> The truth is that the field or recording seems almost
>> intent upon keeping their methods intellectually mushy.
>> It is as if they do not want to know how things work.
>>
>> And the really odd thing is that other people in
>> the sound world are not like this. Auditorium
>> acousticians try like crazy to figure out what
>> does what in concert hall sound. They do a good job too
>> (Harris got Benaroya to match Vienna GMVS reverb time
>> with in 0.1 secs bottom to top--try that with mushy methods).
>> And people who make and adjust instruments study
>> constantly the effects of things. All violinists know
>> which strings do what to the sound. It is part of our
>> work. Knowning such things does not make life less
>> "artistic"--it makes it possible to advance.
>>
>> Only recording(and playback) seems to be attached to
>> the idea that no one ought really to know anything.
>> No one who has made a recording has failed to notice
>> that unexpected and complex things matter. Blumlein
>> miking a one point can sound quite different from
>> the same at another point not far away for example.
>>
>> But once again, a field progresses by analyzing its work
>> one step at a time not be having a club of people
>> who just mess around with the ways they have always
>> messed around and say that no analysis is possible because
>> everything is so complicated. This is the sort of thing
>> that the mush minded said about genetics say, before
>> it began to be figured out. "Oh we shall never understand
>> how things are inherited, it is all so complicated and hidden".
>>
>> To return to the main point, I think it is a basic misunderstanding
>> to say that how a microphone technique records a pink noise
>> source at different spots on a stage is irrelevant information.
>> I think it is very relevant indeed. A journey of ten thousand
>> miles begins with a single step. That would be a reasonable
>> first step in understanding microphone techniques(and microphones).
>>
>> And it is surely a most basic misunderstanding to say that pink
>> noise response is not a useful indicator of sound. Exactly the opposite
>> is true. It is the most reliable and accurate one if one must
>> have a single source--it is a demonstrated fact that it is
>> for example the signal that gives the best identification of which
>> loudspeaker is which when comparing blind two similar but different
>> speaker.
>>
>> Robert
>>
>> On Wed, 3 Jul 2013, David Pickett wrote:
>>
>>  At 06:31 3/7/2013, Robert Greene wrote:
>>>
>>>  Variations from reality ought surely to be based on knowing
>>>> how to reproduce the reality first and then introducing the
>>>> variations. One does not bend pitches for artistic effect
>>>> until one is able to play in tune, so to speak.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Yes, indeed; but such question begging exposes the problem per
>>> analogiam.
>>> What does one define as "in tune"?  What you are asking for is the
>>> ability
>>> to reproduce a complete soundfield with 100% accuracy, and then to
>>> introduce variations.  We have not yet progressed to this level.
>>>
>>>  If people want to treat recording as a pure art form
>>>> where one simply judges the results on aesthetic grounds.
>>>> it would be hard to say that was wrong. But it surely
>>>> takes recording out of the realm of science.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I am not sure that many of its practitioners (even Blumlein) regarded
>>> recording as a science: it is rather an exercise in engineering
>>> combined
>>> with aesthetics and as such intrinsically hard to theorize about.
>>>
>>>  To my mind, offensive or no, it remains startling to me
>>>> that there is no recorded demo of how various stereo mike
>>>> techniques reproduce the sound of a pink noise source at
>>>> various spots around the recording stage, for example.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I cannot imagine that anyone would want to listen to a CD of pink nose
>>> or
>>> that anyone can believe that objective determinations can be made by
>>> doing
>>> so for longer than a few minutes.  The ear adjusts to what it is
>>> hearing,
>>> as the eye does to colours under different lighting conditions and
>>> there is
>>> no equivalent to "grey cards" for white balance. Even doing A/B
>>> comparisons
>>> with the flick of a switch is fraught with self-deception, unless the
>>> levels are controlled and enough time is allowed to accustom oneself to
>>> A
>>> before assessing B.
>>>
>>>  Surely people might want to know whether the mike
>>>> technique was changing the perceived frequency response of sources
>>>> depending on where the sources were?
>>>> How can people NOT want to know this?
>>>>
>>>
>>> There is a book by J?rgen Meyer (Acoustics and the Performance of
>>> Music).
>>> The blurb on Amazon says: "This classic reference on musical acoustics
>>> and
>>> performance practice begins with a brief introduction to the
>>> fundamentals
>>> of acoustics and the generation of musical sounds. It then discusses
>>> the
>>> particulars of the sounds made by all the standard instruments in a
>>> modern
>>> orchestra as well as the human voice, the way in which the sounds made
>>> by
>>> these instruments are dispersed and how the room into which they are
>>> projected affects the sounds."
>>>
>>> I have had this book for over 30 years.  It contains polar diagrams of
>>> most orchestral instruments plotted for different frequencies.  Nobody
>>> that
>>> I know has ever found much use for the data in making a recording,
>>> beyond
>>> those generalizations that are obvious to the ear.
>>>
>>>  I agree with EC that a complete analysis of
>>>> the relationship between recording and musical sound
>>>>  would be a tremendous
>>>> task, perhaps one that is not even well defined.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I think that is a conceit: there are far too many independent variables
>>> and the exercise would probably become what Glen Gould would describe
>>> as
>>> "centipedal".
>>>
>>>  This is how science works. One works out simple cases
>>>> first. The fact that no one knows if there are infinitely
>>>> many primes pairs with difference 2(eg 17 and 19) does
>>>> not make it irrelevant to know that there are infinitely many
>>>> primes. One answers simple questions first.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Again: recording is not a science.  If anything it is a craft with
>>> elements of engineering.  I have been teaching it for over 30 years at
>>> university level and the number of textbooks that are of any use
>>> whatsoever, and those with caveats, can be counted on one hand.  Take,
>>> for
>>> instance, the excellent book on Stereo by Streicher: most of the
>>> information is either theoretical (e.g. the combination of unrealizable
>>> polar diagrams) or else cannot be used without extensive empirical
>>> experimentation.
>>>
>>>  Personally, I would just like to know which mike technique
>>>> does what to the tonal character of sources at different
>>>> locations around the recording stage. If you don't care, you
>>>> don't care. But I wish I had a disc where I could listen
>>>> and find out. I find it hard to believe that other people
>>>> are not interested in this.
>>>>
>>>
>>> As I am sure you know, active listening is a very tiring process that
>>> most people are not trained to participate in.  If one cannot identify
>>> differences within seconds it is best to take a long rest and try again
>>> much later.  Few have the patience for this and professionals cannot
>>> afford
>>> the time when musicians are waiting to perform.
>>>
>>>  Years ago I decided to learn the piano(I am a violinist!)
>>>> just to see how it would go, by learning the Rachmaninoff 3rd
>>>> piano concerto --a measure at a time. As you can imagine I
>>>> did not get very far! (the first statement of the theme
>>>> went ok but soon, no soap). Of course this was a joke!
>>>> I knew from experience of learning to play the violin
>>>> that one learns the basics step by step and builds
>>>> up to the complex pieces over a long time.
>>>>
>>>
>>> It is, of course, possible to learn to play the notes of the whole
>>> concerto if one wants to waste time doing so. There was a young man at
>>> my
>>> high school who had learned to play several complicated pieces.  He
>>> could
>>> not read music and had learned them by rote.  Of course, though he had
>>> "mastered" the last movement of the Moonlight Sonata, this did not help
>>> him
>>> to learn the first prelude of the 48 at a faster rate!
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>> ______________________________**_________________
>>> Sursound mailing list
>>> Sursound@music.vt.edu
>>> https://mail.music.vt.edu/**mailman/listinfo/sursound<https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound>
>>>
>>>  ______________________________**_________________
>> Sursound mailing list
>> Sursound@music.vt.edu
>> https://mail.music.vt.edu/**mailman/listinfo/sursound<https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> --
> As of 1st October 2012, I have retired from the University.
>
> These are my own views and may or may not be shared by the University
>
> Dave Malham
> Honorary Fellow, Department of Music
> The University of York
> York YO10 5DD
> UK
>
> 'Ambisonics - Component Imaging for Audio'
> -------------- next part --------------
> An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
> URL:
> <https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20130705/bb080e09/attachment.html>
> _______________________________________________
> Sursound mailing list
> Sursound@music.vt.edu
> https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound
>

_______________________________________________
Sursound mailing list
Sursound@music.vt.edu
https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound

Reply via email to