In this week’s podcast, Julian is joined by Korey Pereira and Steve DeMott. We discuss sounds we can’t, or won’t, hear. From the merits of high sampling rates to the effect of lossy compression, should we be worrying about stuff no one will hear?
Korey Pereira
Korey Pereira, MPSE, is the owner and creative director of Soularity Sound, a post-production company based in Austin, Texas. They recently completed upgrading their space to Atmos. They work on everything from student films to features to immersive audio for 360.
Korey is also an editor and mixer at Soundcrafter and he is a lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin and a guest lecturer at Texas State University.
Steve DeMott
Steve DeMott is a Connecticut based audio engineer, producer and multi-instrumentalist. He studied Songwriting and Music Production & Engineering at Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA & has been recording professionally for over 20 years and has worked on projects for Sennheiser, Ubisoft & Microsoft Studios.
Arturia
Arturia has a wide selection of software effects, including 3 Compressors, 3 Filters, 3 Preamps, and 3 Delays You'll Actually Use. The latest release, 3 Delays You'll Actually Use, includes Delay TAPE-201, Delay MEMORY BRIGADE, and the unique and experimental Delay ETERNITY. A bundle of selected effects, called the AudioFuse Creative Suite, is included with all AudioFuse audio interfaces. Visit arturia dot com to find out more on the Effects You'll Actually Use.
Talking Points
Should we worry about capturing and preserving sounds we’re never going to hear?
44.1KHz covers 20Hz to 20KHz, why are we recording at 96KHz and higher?
Post-production often has to deal with compromised audio, which is less common in music recording. Because of that is there a case where extreme top end isn’t likely to contain helpful information for a film or television mix?
Has Post opted to favour channel width over HF extension?
Lossy Compressions algorithms discard sounds as a matter of course. Does this affect things?
Bit Depth - Steinberg made 32-bit converters in their UR-C interfaces and Apogee use a 32 bit DAC in the Ensemble. Why aren’t we seeing greater bit depth along with greater sampling frequency?
There is a distribution channel for 96KHz - does that make a difference?
We’ve talked about sounds we can’t hear because they are too high. What about sounds, which are too quiet?
Level and temporal masking in mixes - i.e. sounds which are obscured by other sounds. How significant is that?
The Air Band of the Maag EQ
Source Elements
The Production Expert Podcast is made possible using ‘Source-Connect Now' from Source Elements, the free way to record high quality audio over the internet. Need to record an interview, or a podcast like this one, remotely? With 'Source-Connect Now', you can. Using a Chrome browser, you'll get ISDN equivalent quality audio, without the need to install any additional software. Register for your free account at the special page on the Source Elements website
Find Of The Week
Julian - M-Audio Axiom 61 off eBay for my lightweight keyboard rig
Steve - latest MIOConsole3d Update (pb11) from Metric Halo
Korey - Just picked up a used Pearl MS 8 CL Mid-Side Mic. Arriving on Monday!
RSPE Audio Solutions
RSPE Audio Solutions design, sell and install professional audio and video equipment. Their team are available by phone, live chat, or email to receive and process orders. They have everything you need to build or upgrade your home studio to ensure you can continue to work from home. If there is anything they can do to help, reach out or shop online at RSPEaudio.com