Metal guitar recording methods used by majority are far from optimal?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Kraku
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There is some conceptual weirdness going on with what you're saying, but I'm not sure what exactly. I'm not sure you're using correctly the concepts of the amount of bits and the dynamic range of the song to describe what you try to describe, which makes it hard for me to understand what you actually mean.

Here is the claim: Guitars are reproduced exactly as they are recorded, all the way to the final output that the listener hears.

Here is a single, simple counter, but more than enough to prove that claim false: The vast majority of a modern song can be perfectly represented by 8 bits, usually 5. You CANNOT represent the dynamic range of even a Djent guitar with 8 bits, forget representing an edge of breakup guitar with 5 bits
 
Here is the claim: Guitars are reproduced exactly as they are recorded, all the way to the final output that the listener hears.

Here is a single, simple counter, but more than enough to prove that claim false: The vast majority of a modern song can be perfectly represented by 8 bits, usually 5. You CANNOT represent the dynamic range of even a Djent guitar with 8 bits, forget representing an edge of breakup guitar with 5 bits

What you say is not true. Even with my lousy 15 dollar boxy sounding tiny speakers that are attached to my computer, I can already hear the noise in the 8 bit audio. With 5 bits there's a horrible amount of scratchy noise in the audio. Here's an audio example:

https://filebin.net/q6hl16snhe8twr2i

The first 7 seconds is the original 16 bit audio. Next 7 seconds is the 8 bit audio and you can clearly hear the high frequency sizzle. The last 7 seconds is the 5 bit audio and it sounds so crunchy that no-one would ever even think of releasing any songs using that low bit depth for their audio.
 
What in the world has this thread devolved into.

I’m still curious about hearing an example of the OP’s new approach for capturing the sound of a cab. Anybody tried it yet? Care to post clips if you have?
 
What in the world has this thread devolved into.

I’m still curious about hearing an example of the OP’s new approach for capturing the sound of a cab. Anybody tried it yet? Care to post clips if you have?
Apparently you have not understood what the actual topic of this thread is about. I already wrote an answer to this earlier in the thread. You would be aware of it if you had read my answers:

 
Apparently you have not understood what the actual topic of this thread is about. I already wrote an answer to this earlier in the thread. You would be aware of it if you had read my answers:


No, I understood good and well what you were asking about, which is why I clearly outlined how what you were asking for was nonsensical, mostly due to your misconception of the underlying foundational principles of how speakers and speaker cabinets work, which you would’ve known if you had read and understood my posts.

To summarize, it is impossible to record “the true sound“ of a speaker because there is no singular “true sound“ of a speaker or speaker cab. Instead, the sound of a speaker only exists in the context of a specific listener’s perspective, whether that "listener" is a single microphone, multiple microphones, or a pair of human ears. I also went into particular detail about how guitar cabs and FRFR cabs are fundamentally different and why one cannot replicate the other.

I’d be happy for you to further clarify exactly how I misunderstood what you were asking for though.

The reason I keep asking for clips is because I know what you are asking for can’t be done, and so if you actually tried to do it, you might learn that and deepen your understanding of what you’re talking about here.

I realize I might be sound like a dick but I am genuinely trying to help here.
 
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No, I understood good and well what you were asking about, which is why I clearly outlined how what you were asking for was nonsensical, mostly due to your misconception of the underlying foundational principles of how speakers and speaker cabinets work, which you would’ve known if you had read and understood my posts.

To summarize, it is impossible to record “the true sound“ of a speaker because there is no singular “true sound“ of a speaker or speaker cab. Instead, the sound of a speaker only exists in the context of a specific listener’s perspective, whether that "listener" is a single microphone, multiple microphones, or a pair of human ears. I also went into particular detail about how guitar cabs and FRFR cabs are fundamentally different and why one cannot replicate the other.

I’d be happy for you to further clarify exactly how I misunderstood what you were asking for though.

The reason I keep asking for clips is because I know what you are asking for can’t be done, and so if you actually tried to do it, you might learn that and deepen your understanding of what you’re talking about here.

I realize I might be sound like a dick but I am genuinely trying to help here.
OK, I don't want to copy paste two full posts earlier from this thread, so I'll just put links here, which contain the information I'd like to write here again:

The below post covers the following points:
- It is possible to capture a sound source (a person speaking) accurately and then reproduce it through a studio monitor so that it's pretty much indistinguishable from its original source.
- The listeners perspective was fairly same for the speaking person and the studio monitor that played back a version of that speaking persons voice.
- The head of the speaking person radiates audio all over the place 360 degrees, probably similar way as does the studio monitor, but still the test was scientifically valid enough for Genelec to use it.
- The above points indicates that it should probably be possible in theory to do the same for a guitar cabinet. If not as-is, then probably by containing the radiating audio from the other sides of the cabinet than its front side.
- Use 1x12 cabinet to remove any unwanted phase boost/attenuation issues that would raise from having several speaker elements producing the same sound and their frequencies mixing together in different phases.



You mentioned earlier that the sound coming out of the cabinet often doesn't sound at all like the sound you hear through the mics while sitting in the control room. The below link explains my point of view to this: it's like trying to paint a picture with beautiful colors, while having a strongly color tinted sunglasses on. Sure it's possible but it's really convoluted and cumbersome process as you don't see what you'll get. You'll be guessing all the time. So why use those sunglasses in the first place? The only reason you're sitting in a different room is to be able to monitor the guitar cabinet. What if you could actually hear the sound properly without having to listen to its sound through mics? That would make the whole process much more simple, quick, easy and straighforward, and you wouldn't need a separate room for it.

 
OK, so if the audio is that loud, then apparently the quantization noise becomes quite inaudible.

Now that I understand what you meant, how does this relate to the topic of this thread?
It has to do with the claims I posted it in response to. Mostly about the size of the container you need to fill with that sound. WYSIWYG recording is great, but the output won't be
 
It has to do with the claims I posted it in response to. Mostly about the size of the container you need to fill with that sound. WYSIWYG recording is great, but the output won't be
I still don't understand what you're getting at. Could you elaborate what you mean about "container you need to fill with that sound"?
 
I still don't understand what you're getting at. Could you elaborate what you mean about "container you need to fill with that sound"?
IF you wanted a wysiwyg guitar recording, it won’t fit in the dynamic range left by mixing to -8 LUFS. It will have to be compressed and no longer WYSIWYG
 
IF you wanted a wysiwyg guitar recording, it won’t fit in the dynamic range left by mixing to -8 LUFS. It will have to be compressed and no longer WYSIWYG
Ah! You mean if I want to hear the final compressed full mix of the song while recording the guitar parts?
That's not necessary. I'll leave the mixing and mastering for later stage :)
 
No.

I’m not sure why I’m not communicating this clear enough. Maybe someone else can reword it or maybe I’m just not saying it right

What I’m saying is that you CANNOT faithfully reproduce the dynamic range of a guitar part at -8 LUFS
 
No.

I’m not sure why I’m not communicating this clear enough. Maybe someone else can reword it or maybe I’m just not saying it right

What I’m saying is that you CANNOT faithfully reproduce the dynamic range of a guitar part at -8 LUFS
OK, let's back up a bit so I might understand what you're after here:

LUFS = Loudness Units (relative to) Full Scale of what the audio file/streaming format is capable of reproducing. I.e. when you have a finished song (after mastering), you can analyze how loud the song sounds like to the listener, relative to the maximum loudness you could store into that digital format.

Where exactly did you get that 8 LUFS for guitar recording situation?

Please describe the signal chain which makes that 8 LUFS number relevant here.
 
I don't know how to make this any more clear. You were talking about a WYSIWYG guitar recording. You can't fit the dynamic range of an electric guitar in -8 LUFS unless the guitar isn't plugged in. No matter how perfectly you capture the guitar, you would need to drastically reduce the dynamic range in order to get the song to current mastering levels. That's all any of this ever meant.
 
I don't know how to make this any more clear. You were talking about a WYSIWYG guitar recording. You can't fit the dynamic range of an electric guitar in -8 LUFS unless the guitar isn't plugged in. No matter how perfectly you capture the guitar, you would need to drastically reduce the dynamic range in order to get the song to current mastering levels. That's all any of this ever meant.
But we're not talking about mixed and mastered songs here with WYSIWYG guitar recording. Just the sound design part of it.
 
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