Taking the good advice of Tom and Bill into account and reading everything I can in my quest to make our Part 15 sound really good, here is another actual aircheck, after
Desert Ear said:Rickity,
I listened and it sounds very good! Professional
You'll have to show me your setup next time we come to Jerome. Couldn't find you when we left the store, last time!
DE
Tom Wells said:I really want to know more about source material for music and does any work go into individual files in the library?
The recording of I Love You, by People sounded bizarre, but I only "know" how the actual 45 sounds,
and it's a lot more full.
How about the sound in the car? More/less bass? Have you any continuous (knob) tuned AMs?
Still seems gated to me, like something is supressing everything down, like too much damping. Over-dried.
Something is eating up your ambience, "air" and openess. Or could be the radio.
Even small amounts of reverb present in the recordings still seem to be getting vacuumed away.
In "Who Are You" the quieter parts totally fall off. I think the level in is going to have to be higher
and something is going to have to squash a lot more, and as others say, doing it in steps.
I confess to hand-editing every file that goes into the sound library, which helps a lot to minimze variation.
Bill DeFelice said:I listened to the aircheck yesterday with my Bose monitors but I wanted to wait to listen in the office so I could have more than one listen before giving any comments.
The audio sounds clear and, what I would consider, under processed. I picked up what Tom was referring on "I Love You" where solo voice sings "and I don't know what to say" comes in. I own the promo single in my personal music collection which may be EQed differently but the solo voice sounds quite distant - perhaps because it's below the threshold of the 222 processor.
I don't want to lead you astray since I don't know what sonic signature you're looking for. I know some like that open, transparent and less processed sound. Since it sounds from your airchecks your format more closely resembles "classic hits" I always like a nice bit of compression along with a little bump up at 125 Hz for bass in the car on AM. Granted, I heard other music in your airchecks that I wouldn't classify as "classic hits" and it's possible you wouldn't want a lot of compression/processing on those tracks. This is where you'll have to chart your own course for the sound you want.
Since you're dealing with such a limited signal you may want to use some compression to squeak out the best coverage (which may be why you notice the electrical noise now - with more "open-air" audio it's not masking the noise by covering it. It will help your perceived coverage in the fridge of your signal.
As I write this I've reached the Boz Scaggs track and it's still quite pleasant to listen to without any pumping. I've jumped around the aircheck well and reached "Who Are You" where the soft portion is competing with the hum that's in the audio from 31:10 - 31:33. This is where some gentle pre-processing could improve the listenability by better controlling the levels feeding the 222. I skipped ahead to "Bad Time" by Grand Funk which sounds very good, probably since the song itself has some amount of compression within it, allowing the 222 to be closer to its "sweet spot."
While simply just opinion on my part, I think you'd be better served by some sort of level control, be it a Compellor or a budget musician's compressor set for gentle gain riding connected before the 222. I wouldn't fuss much with any sort of sonic maximizers with AM - I never used any with either of the AM Stereo stations I engineered and feel there's better methods to create a signature sound.
Good luck on your journey in the land of audio processing.
druidhillsradio said:Nice sound. I remember the song "I love you" as well. Always liked it. What is the useful range of Gulch if I may be so bold. Thanks, John