Yorkshire Mouth
Major Contributor
I suspect this may lose something as it travels across the Atlantic.
YouTube suggested this to me, and I fell for the clickbait. I'm a little annoyed by the whole exercise. He claims that there's something wrong with the recording, but the thing he points out is purposeful and common practice. It's actually something that bothers me a bit for "naturalistic" recordings like this, but it's a tradeoff that many engineers (and presumably listeners) are happy with. So claiming something is "wrong" about the recording is simply an unsubstantiated opinion on how performances ought to be recorded.
I take the "then you're not an audiophile" angle to be snark and clickbait. But it still pisses me off that he asks us to listen intently (twice!) to a piece only to pull out that cheap punchline.
I just discovered this guy and I find him annoying. His logic is often flawed. I am talking about his video on dithering.
I come from the audio engineering world and he just says silly things. I have trouble understanding his motivations unless they're just clicks.As I said, I thought he’d lose a lot in translation.
So do you think that there is something wrong with the recording he used? What about this one? Or this one, seemingly recorded from the drummer's seat but also featuring the typical "40-foot wide" piano sound?Not cheap. A valid point.
We often discuss what it means to be an audiophile, and when it ‘goes too far’. This is a good example of where bring an audiophile results in not being able to see the wood for trees.
I think you understand his motivations perfectly.I have trouble understanding his motivations unless they're just clicks.
This of course is the problem with youtube. It's mostly clickbait noise. And then there's the ridiculous thumbnails they make you do.I think you understand his motivations perfectly.
So do you think that there is something wrong with the recording he used? What about this one? Or this one, seemingly recorded from the drummer's seat but also featuring the typical "40-foot wide" piano sound?
These recording techniques are extremely common. I find them to be distracting in an "uncanny valley" sort of way, but they also place you "in the music" in a way. I personally prefer more naturalistic recordings for classical and jazz, like mid-60s Miles. But I think that's mostly fallen by the wayside. And there's no right or wrong, only tradeoffs.
So yes, it's cheap. He's having us jump through all these hoops to find out what's wrong with the recording, only to point out something that isn't an actual defect.
I come from the audio engineering world and he just says silly things. I have trouble understanding his motivations unless they're just clicks.
Define “I come from audio engineering”.
I mean if you were a producer, or engineer, or similar, you’d just say so.
Well his youtbe channel is a joke. Granted, I've only been able to stomach watching about 6 videos but I'm baffled by his choices.Just asking!
David Mellor’s credentials are beyond reproach.
Do you disagree that this is extremely common these days, even in straight classical recording? Did you listen to the Fischer example I linked? Here's a recent Mozart violin concerto recording. Here's Yo-Yo Ma, solo Bach. Here's another one. And another.I have to disagree.
If it were some sort of experimental recording, maybe contemporary classical, that might be different. But this was a straight classical recording, and it shouldn’t be there.
Are you talking to me? Why so much anger? You need some Newcastle Brown before typing.It’s not moving ‘a little’. Every time you over or under exaggerate a point, you diminish your own argument.
By the way, whether or not you like his videos’ titles is completely immaterial. The fact you felt it was something to point out only further diminishes your argument.
Are you talking to me? Why so much anger? You need some Newcastle Brown before typing.