Keeping the "soul" in a recording is tricky.Carmine5 said:I encountered a very eye-opening experience a couple of weeks ago. I was transferring a friend's Sheffield Labs direct-to-disk recording to digital. I have Stanton's best turntable and cartridge and was using a ProTools 002 rack system which has very good D/As and using a 24-bit sample rate.
The original recording, although showing a slight bit of wear since it was from the 70's, still had plenty of life and punch to it. Very full and live. It sounded amazing. But the transfer to digital sounded entirely different. Technically all the information was there. But it seemed as if the "soul" had been ripped out of it.
If someone heard the digital transfer they would think it sounded great (once the clicks were removed). But stacked against the original LP and it would be apparent that something was missing. It may be also that the direct-to-disc process makes the shortcomings of digital all the more obvious. It really brought home to me that there is more to hearing a great recording than just the absence of noise.
It's not for nothing that, for a third straight year, sales of vinyl records has actually increased (by 33%). True, the sales are negligible compared to overall music sales but no one is reporting that CD sales are on an uptick. And if some of the younger ones on this board have never heard a direct-to-disk recording, try to find one on eBay or specialty store. It will blow you away. c5
I have done quite a few transfers of music from vinyl to digital and have noticed exactly what you describe.
It seems counter-intuitive that you might not want to use alll the headroom available in digital, but I think that what's going on.
If a recording has already been "squashed" with limiting and compression, it can safely use the whole volume range available for best
S/N ratio, but if a recording has really wide dynamic range, it seems that the only way to get a decent representation of the recording
is to leave a good deal of headroom, and NOT let the peaks max out (as viewed in an audio editor).
I suspect this is an issue with the 2nd derivative, where the No. 1 is the actual amplitude, and No. 2 is the "acceleration" of the waveform.
Even if the level never reaches maximum, sonically "stunning" recordings have very sharp transients, that "take off" as though they are going to
overshoot the max level, even though they don't. It requires leaving extra "room" for "overshoot" of the the D/A conversion or something.
That's my best guess. If you still have the record, try re-dubbing it at about 2-3 db lower and see if the "punch" and clarity come through better.