HW: live material
Iain Ferguson
iainferguson at AOL.COM
Wed Jul 11 08:29:09 EDT 2007
don't forget chaps, that there woyld be royalties to all those involved.
Iain
Carl Edlund Anderson wrote on 11/07/2007, 13:10:
> On 11/07/2007 12:17, john-paul wrote:
> > surely there are people on this list capable of "cleaning" up
> recordings
> > on their computers, with the software that is available nowadays.
>
> Well .... I don't think it's _quite_ as easy as just that. Sure, any of
> us can load up a WAV file and tweak the EQ a bit -- but cleaning up
> and/or remixing archival audio *well* still requires (I think) pro-grade
> gear and (not to be forgotten) a good and well-trained ear. Though,
> obviously, the cost of the technology keeps coming down and the
> capabilities keep going up so the possibilities improve with each
> passing minute. (Ears, however, remain at a premium! ;)
>
> Of course, a rubbish quality source is still a rubbish quality source.
> There's only so much that can be done to fix up, say, grimy 2-track
> audio that sounds like it was recorded in a toilet. You might be able
> to make it sound like it was recorded in a slightly posher toilet :) but
> that's about it.
>
> Still, the likelihood is that Dave's got a few gems squirreled away that
> could well be polished off. IMO, selling digital downloads of any
> forthcoming archival material direct from the band's web site or through
> an outfit like livedownloads.com or whatever is the way forward. No CD
> production and shipping costs! :) More percentage for the band, cheaper
> music for the fans :)
>
> Cheers,
> Carl
>
> ps - I've heard some very good fan-made rescues of archival Grateful
> Dead live recordings, though when I say "fan" here, I mean fans who
> happen to be pro audio engineers with a studio full of snazzy gear over
> which hunched for *aeons* of their spare time, manually ironing out each
> click and pop in the source tapes. Sounded pretty good in the end, but
> clearly a _lot_ of work.
>
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