I don't know what to say but thank you!
I've had an idea of what I wanted the audio to be like on CBS FM since I started playing with processing back on Long Island in the early 1990's. I always loved CBS FM but never liked the audio too much. At first I thought it may be the processing, but now that I've been here it was the method in which the audio was transferred to digital in the mid 1990's. Not so much the method of creating the files, but the fact that alot of the songs were put thru an expander that swallowed up alot of the low passages and made the audio sound flat. I always thought it was the main processor doing that, but it's on the actual files.
With the help of Dermot O'Neil (production) and the jocks, we've been slowly replacing files with better sounding copies. With the day to day routine of everything that goes on, it's hard to get to sometimes, but since I have almost a 2 hour commute by car, I listen and jot down songs that need to be replaced as I hear them (A-Z helped alot last week!)
Over the years I have spent thousands on small cheap compressors trying to find inexpensive fixes when you couldn't afford something like a Compellor or Ariane.
In 1999 I was in Sam Ash in Melville and I saw this sitting in the rack for $75
http://monisound.nl/Front afbeeldingen/front mdx4000.JPG
A two band stereo leveller.. the Behringer MDX-4000. It sounded good stock, but there was only one control for density. So I modified the unit to have a slower attack time and a faster release time.... if I ran the ratio up to 3:1 or 4:1 it gave you some extra bounce without the AGC clamping down on the audio... and the release time could be very fast without the audio chopping like you would get on a standard compressor with fast release.
I changed the crossover... it was a one button control that would select 500Hz or 2k. It's set for 125Hz now.
It was deployed at WXBA in Brentwood in 2001. When I left WXBA in 2004 it came with me and sat on a shelf until August 2008 when it went in the WCBS-FM airchain. It was out just before the move when it was recapped and has been back ever since.
If you pull it out, the audio changes alot, especially with transitions. I call it the "added inch" and I do have a beat on another unit in case this one fails.