Mark Knecht wrote: > On Sat, 2004-02-21 at 19:37, Jack O'Quin wrote: > > >>I think Mark is coming from a traditional audio engineer perspective. >>He's comfortable with the controls of a parametric EQ. Many other >>potential JAMin users are likely to share this view. > > > This is basically the case and pretty true for me. I use all of the > Waves Masters Bundle for this sort of job, and I'm just speaking from my > personal experience when I say that the times I've done *more* in what I > call 'my' mastering step in the end I've been less satisfied with the > results long term. > > I meant what I said earlier. I think there's a very tempting aspect > about all the control JAMin gives you that may actually work against you > in the end. Get it right in the mix and there's less to do in mastering. > It becomes more of a job of putting 12 songs in a row in a way that all > hangs together. > > I do think that the scenes feature in JAMin is quite intriguing in a > mastering tool though, but I admit I've been scared to try it for fear > that when transitioning from scene to scene the tool would leave > artifacts if scenes were verse and chorus as the web site sort of > advertises. I want to try that one day soon. > > >>Is it possible to provide parametric user interface controls for our >>underlying 1000-band FFT-based equalizer? This could be an >>alternative to the HDEQ for those who want it. > > > Or to those who might need it for CPU usage reasons... > > >>I'm imagining doing more or less what the parametric sliders do, only >>based on user settings for frequency, Q, and boost/cut dB. I realize >>this would take quite a bit of programming, though not as much as the >>HDEQ, I suspect. > > > Anything happening in terms of someone developing the Linux equivalent > of a program like CD Architect? One of these days someone's going to > want to build overlapped songs with separate track points for each song. > I don't think we have a tool to do that yet, and to really do mastering > we need to be able to do the whole job. > Currently the way to do it is to layout the tracks in aroud then use hte export markers to cdda command. Then you export the session and when you burn it pass the file created when you exported the markers as a command line option. I've used it and it works. I never use a gui for cdrecord so it's a pretty simple thing to add an axtra flag for the markers. -- Patrick Shirkey - Boost Hardware Ltd. http://www.boosthardware.com http://www.djcj.org/LAU/guide/ - The Linux Audio Users guide http://www.djcj.org/gigs/ - Gigs guide Korea ======================================== Apparently upon the beginning of the barrage, the donkey broke discipline and panicked, toppling the cart. At that point, the rockets disconnected from the timer, leaving them strewn around the street. Tethered to the now toppled cart, the donkey was unable to escape before the arrival of U.S. troops. United Press International Rockets on donkeys hit major Baghdad sites By P. MITCHELL PROTHERO Published 11/21/2003 11:13 AM ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net is sponsored by: Speed Start Your Linux Apps Now. Build and deploy apps & Web services for Linux with a free DVD software kit from IBM. Click Now! http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1356&alloc_id=3438&op=click _______________________________________________ Jamin-devel mailing list Jamin-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jamin-develReceived on Sat Feb 21 23:17:04 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : 02/21/04 23:17 EST