I've read all of your threads on the use of compression on recordings. You are adament about riding the fader and watching the dynamics of the performance.
There's another school of though a la Tom Lord-Alge, where he squashes the living hell out of everything, and then actually automates the entire performance, and mixing in the dynamics. From listening to his recordings, I really don't hear any loss of transients.
Is this basically a subjective thing?
Also, I'm a Berklee MPE student. Would you have time in your schedule to come back and do a mic Master class like you did several years ago. My friend Rachel was there, and could not stop talking about it.
There's another school of though a la Tom Lord-Alge, where he squashes the living hell out of everything, and then actually automates the entire performance, and mixing in the dynamics. From listening to his recordings, I really don't hear any loss of transients.
If I remember correctly, Tom Lord-Alge over-compresses stuff that has been either badly recorded or badly compressed (before it is handed to him for mixing) and then recreates the dynamics by riding the fader; he didn't say anything about doing that specific thing on everything, at least not in the SOS interview I've read multiple times. He definitely loves his compressors, though!
OK, just found the quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Lord-Alge
"I often find that I want to uncompress things that are on the tape, when they are over-compressed or compressed in a non-musical way. But I fix that by compressing even more, and then creating new dynamics by using the faders. Automation comes in handy for that."