Showing posts with label Waves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waves. Show all posts

Oct 10, 2014

Analog Secret - Exposed!

The sweet eluding analog vibe has intrigued men since the creation of digital audio. There are countless number of plugins to destroy your crystal clear digital audio trying to emulate analog systems. I for one like analog sound because the equipment looks cool.

Analog adds a flavor of cool

Time to crack the mystery for us mere mortals. What makes the analog sound? My non-peer-reviewed scientific method will reveal the secret. Read on, if you dare!


Sep 26, 2014

Short'n Snappy #1 - Compression

It's been a busy few weeks again. I finished one new mix (listen here) but mostly did some quick edits and tinkered (with a relatively low success) with some mastering gizmos on some recordings. In addition, our project band has got some new spark on recording our next song. Not to mention the home-front with all the undone stuff piling up. Therefore I decided to start a series of Short'n Snappy tutorialish snippets on all things mixing. These shouldn't take too much time and I'm sure that I will learn a lot, as I try squeeze my limited knowledge on a Short'n Snappy format. And who knows, maybe someone else can get something out if it too.

Short'n Snappy Compression

So onwards to the Short'n Snappy road to understanding Compression. Read why you would want to compress things, what compression does, what are the basic controls concerning compression and check out a bonus example of CLA-3A compressor on action. Welcome!


Sep 5, 2014

Home Studio Improvement - New Sheriff in Town

Finally, after a few more heat strokes from my old work horse, I got a new laptop for my studio. No more sweaty palms and panic accompanied by the sweet scent of electric burn. No need for the usual questions. When was my last backup run? Did I remember to save? Will it start again? Where's Matlock?

Now there's a new Sheriff in town. ASUS N750J taking control and asking no questions. A huge improvement, not only in reliability, but in performance also. But it wasn't all that easy. When it came to moving my studio software and audio interface, what started as a simple task, transformed into a vortex of licensing procedures sucking the life out of me.