Why the car?
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- mojobone
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Re: Why the car?
The iLok dongle is really useful if you use more than one computer for music; so long as you use the proper flavor of installer for your machine, most plugins are agnostic. There are lots of convolution-based solutions to this eternal conundrum; this is one of the more elaborate and successful attempts at providing recordists with a stellar room: http://www.soundonsound.com/reviews/uni ... ay-studios and it's been out for nearly five years. Personally, when I want something to sound like a movie, I load up the Todd-AO soundstage IR. If you search, you can probably also find the Sony scoring stage and the big room at Skywalker Sound. It's a wonder more sample libraries don't include this kinda thing so you can match your samples to theirs and have them sounding off in the same virtual room.
- fuzzbox
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Re: Why the car?
Interesting... I've been using the VRM for a few years now: https://global.focusrite.com/news/see-t ... -new-video Comes in handy...




- guscave
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Re: Why the car?
I’ve used a lot of different types of “virtual room” plugins and the one thing you have to consider is that you’re still listening to them through the same speakers, in the same room. This is why a “good” reference tracks will always be a better option.
I've been using the Voxengo Curve EQ to get a visual on where my mix and my reference track differ and it's helped a lot. But again, you need to have a very good reference track that is as close to your song as possible. Otherwise you'll get conflicting results.
I've been using the Voxengo Curve EQ to get a visual on where my mix and my reference track differ and it's helped a lot. But again, you need to have a very good reference track that is as close to your song as possible. Otherwise you'll get conflicting results.
- fuzzbox
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Re: Why the car?
Yep! I totally agree guscave. But now and again I listen to the reference track through my VRM as well!



- fuzzbox
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Re: Why the car?
When I discovered..., well was taught to use reference tracks when monitoring, it opened up a whole new world. All you need is your reference tracks and a pair of speakers... it really doesn't matter which ones so long as you A/B on the same speakers you get a good mix. The more experienced you are at A/B-ing then the better the mix. You don't even need any room acoustics... if you constantly A/B... How hard can it be! LOL

But also ensure you level-match as well!



But also ensure you level-match as well!

- guscave
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Re: Why the car?
Totally agree with fuzzbox. Once you get use to A/B with a good reference track, you don't need anything else. At the end of the day what you're trying to achieve is to have your song sound as close to a professionally mixed and mastered commercial song. So why not use that song to get there?
IMO the Virtual room plugings are a waste of time. You're still going to get a false sense of how your song sounds in other systems because you're still listening in the same environment.

IMO the Virtual room plugings are a waste of time. You're still going to get a false sense of how your song sounds in other systems because you're still listening in the same environment.
- mojobone
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Re: Why the car?
Um, but not on headphones, which presumably eliminate your room from the equation; I theenk Waves' NX was mentioned upthread, somewhere.guscave wrote:Totally agree with fuzzbox. Once you get use to A/B with a good reference track, you don't need anything else. At the end of the day what you're trying to achieve is to have your song sound as close to a professionally mixed and mastered commercial song. So why not use that song to get there?![]()
IMO the Virtual room plugings are a waste of time. You're still going to get a false sense of how your song sounds in other systems because you're still listening in the same environment.
- guscave
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Re: Why the car?
True, headphone will eliminate the room issue, but if those cans do not have a true flat eq response (which most don't), you're going to be adding (or removing) even more false frequencies to your mix.mojobone wrote:Um, but not on headphones, which presumably eliminate your room from the equation; I theenk Waves' NX was mentioned upthread, somewhere.guscave wrote:Totally agree with fuzzbox. Once you get use to A/B with a good reference track, you don't need anything else. At the end of the day what you're trying to achieve is to have your song sound as close to a professionally mixed and mastered commercial song. So why not use that song to get there?![]()
IMO the Virtual room plugings are a waste of time. You're still going to get a false sense of how your song sounds in other systems because you're still listening in the same environment.
Ex: My headphones tend to add about 6db boost at about 100hz and also at about 16k . Unless the VR software first compensates for this extra boost, it's not going to give me a true representation of the room I'm trying to emulate.
- fuzzbox
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Re: Why the car?
I have used Reference 3 by Sonarworks and that goes someway to eliminate the room… or rather give the listener a flat response in the headphones that you’re using because the software is calibrated to do that for particular set of headphones. For me, I think it works reasonably well with my limited experience.



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