
Clouds
https://soundcloud.com/john-freese/clouds
Clouds on clouds, in volumes driven,
Curtain round the vault of heaven.
-Thomas Love Peacock
Written in N4.
John
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JohnF wrote:
Clouds
https://soundcloud.com/john-freese/clouds
Clouds on clouds, in volumes driven,
Curtain round the vault of heaven.
-Thomas Love Peacock
Written in N4.
John
Surfwhammy wrote:I also like the instrumentation but with one exception, which specifically is the instrument that has what appears to be a prominent white noise component . . .
idiotSavant wrote:I usually apply a focused parametric EQ to eliminate this effect, sometimes successfully, sometimes not. I think this adds to what many refer to as a "chilly" sound from the strings, especially the violins.
JohnF wrote:
idiotsavant - I'll have to try that out. Do you eq all the time?
idiotSavant wrote:I also will often boost the +/- 250 hz range in strings which equates to the "wood" of the instrument. This makes the sound more realistic to my ears since it brings out the sound of the hollow wood body, which is where warmth comes from for strings. I also sometimes boost the highs at about 1.5-3.0 kHz (depending on the instrument) to bring out the sound of the bow moving across the string if that's the effect I want.
idiotSavant wrote:So last night I was walking through the train station to catch my afternoon ride home and there was an old Chinese guy playing a Chinese cello. This man's instrument was a crude version, basically a stick with strings stretched over it and a small drum-like chamber at the bottom for resonance.
I stopped to listen to the sound and realized that this was a great illustration of the psychoacoustic effects that Surf talks about.
idiotSavant wrote:JohnF wrote:
idiotsavant - I'll have to try that out. Do you eq all the time?
John, when I first started using VSL I struggled with the "cold" sound of the string samples. I started playing with EQ about a year ago to warm up the sound. Then recently someone here posted something that was quite a revelation for me. They said that many sample libraries (and this might include yours) are what I will call "frequency-inclusive". In other words, the samples are recorded, usually in a sound isolation chamber, to capture the full range of an instrument. But listeners in "real" environments never hear the instrument this way - they hear it with frequencies attenuated by the music stand, by the player in front of the player, by the players in front of those players, by the diffusion created by the materials in the hall or room, by the audience in front of the listener, etc. etc. You get the picture.
Since you can't add frequencies that don't exist in a sample, the intent with a "frequency-inclusive" sample is that virtual instrument recordists (us) can use EQ in a subtractive way to start to filter frequencies. The frequencies that I end up filtering are the highs in very particular ranges with tight Q values (what I call "surgical EQ") to remove some of the harshness that I find associated with the samples I'm using. The "scrape" of the high range in a cello is a perfect example. I used to try to add low end to warm things up but found that everything was becoming a muddy mess.
I also will often boost the +/- 250 hz range in strings which equates to the "wood" of the instrument. This makes the sound more realistic to my ears since it brings out the sound of the hollow wood body, which is where warmth comes from for strings. I also sometimes boost the highs at about 1.5-3.0 kHz (depending on the instrument) to bring out the sound of the bow moving across the string if that's the effect I want.
Very long answer to your short question, but I hope you find it helpful. Almost any DAW has built in EQ, and there are a lot of free and inexpensive EQ plug-ins out there. I'm searching now for the best EQ tools. I just tested a very nice VST EQ from Hofa. Free evaluation download, check it out.
http://hofa-plugins.de/pages/start_en/hofa-iq-eq_en.php
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