Quote:
Originally Posted by flmason
Perhaps you don't understand either.
Alledgedly a *recording* tool called "Gearbox" takes care of that for us. So assuming for a minute that the tool really does it's job, and further that "equipment doesn't matter" as some suggest, then that leaves "recording technique".
Now follow this... if the tool covers the room and mic... the gap between "tool sounds like home tone" and "tool sounds like studio recording" should be a delta acceptable to this thread, or at least I'd think.
On the otherhand, if the tool really is crap... then guess the masters of this discipline should take the manufacturers to task on it, not the users that are baffled by the seeming gap.
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I don't see the term "Gearbox" in the post I quoted. I responded to that post. I was under the misapprehension that you wanted to learn how to get from making recordings that sound like the first one to recordings that sound like the second one.
Clearly you have some other objective.
Fran