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Re: [ARSCLIST] Can 78s sound better than LPs?



This is true, and the dead-room trend returned when multi-track/overdub recording became standard. 70's rock albums almost all have the signature flaccid drum sound, yuk. I think what Steven is talking about is the difference between capturing sound in a large space where it has room to "breathe" and develop vs. close-in mic'ing in a dead space where all of the air and space is purposely eliminated. In latter days, very elaborate electronic reverb effects have been employed to overcome this. Listen to, for example, 1970's David Bowie records. The sound is not unpleasing but it's un-natural, "produced." This became more and more the norm over time, including with orchestra recordings. Nowadays, not only is the latest "pop tart's" reed-thin vocal track processed thru a digi-echo, she also gets a thickening/doubling treatment and, since she likely can't sing in tune, digital pitch correction. "Live" in concert (the only "live" thing being her undulating mid-section and hips), she just lip-syncs. Oh, also, since her "band" is usually one guy who also writes the songs, a "song" is made up of loops so he need only play one verse, one chorus and the bridge correctly, once.

----- Original Message ----- From: "steven c" <stevenc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, August 26, 2006 12:34 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Can 78s sound better than LPs?



----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
That said, Art Shifrin, another grooved-disk expert I very much trust and
respect, played for me
some Noel Coward 78's made in, I believe, the very end of the
acoustic-recording era. They sounded
like one was in the room. How? Hard to fathom.
(Fairly) simple! Our human ears/mind combination expect the additional
information which is derived from echo/reverberation. Remember, over a
million years or so, the human survivors were those who could figure
out where the bear was, and eat IT...those lacking that skill were
eaten by said bear!

During virtually all of the "78 era," recording studios were designed in
such a way as to virtually eliminate echo and reverberation...which
produced an acoustically "dead" sound (though that few who noticed had
no idea why!). This leaves our minds with the idea "this doesn't sound
right!" since even echo-free stereo is lacking a dimension!

As a comparison...locate and play a copy of "Freshie" by Waring's
Pennsylvanians c.1925-26! For whatever reason, this was recorded
in a studio that was acoustically "live" (echoes were allowed!).
When I first played this record, I was almost convinced it was
stereo...the difference is that striking!

Steven C. Barr


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