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Rockbox mail archiveSubject: Re: Equalising "Problem"Re: Equalising "Problem"
From: Rocker <rocker_at_shaw.ca>
Date: Sat, 13 Mar 2004 11:15:17 -0700 Most quality recording studioews have a variety of speaker sizes and configurations to test what your product will sound like on various types of systems. i.e.. boom box, radio home stereo etc. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Fred Maxwell" <rockbox_at_anti-spam.org> To: "Rockbox development" <rockbox_at_cool.haxx.se> Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 1:32 PM Subject: Re: Equalising "Problem" Gerrit Van Vranken wrote: > This is why there are equalizers on > stereo equipment. Equalization is done during the recording process to > separate instruments and vocals to their own audible place in the audio > spectrum and to normalize the sound for play on a variety of systems (car > speakers, boom boxes and high end systems). Mixing is how the instruments and vocals are positioned in a multi-channel recording. Equalization is an adjustment to the frequency spectrum to affect the tonal balance of the recording. This is done either to cause the recording to sound more realistic or to achieve some musical effect (e.g. exaggerated bass on rap and hip-hop). Seldom are commercial recordings released with eqaulization to compensate for assumed strengths or weaknesses of listeners' systems (though that was done by Elvis, who listened on an AM radio because that's what most of his listeners owned). If one were to EQ a recording to compensate for the substandard sound of most boom-boxes, it would be unlistenable on a high-end system. And, after paying many thousands of dollars to construct such a system, I'd be pretty pissed off to buy such a recording. Regards, Fred Maxwell _______________________________________________ http://cool.haxx.se/mailman/listinfo/rockbox _______________________________________________ http://cool.haxx.se/mailman/listinfo/rockbox Received on 2004-03-13 Page template was last modified "Tue Sep 7 00:00:02 2021" The Rockbox Crew -- Privacy Policy |