"Esprit" on Tchavolo's "Alors ... Voila" has a great old scratchy vinyl sound, with a very thin acoustic like a vintage recording. Does anyone know how this is achieved? I use Cakewalk Sonar Producer Edition, can't find anything in the effects that seems to apply.
Benny
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Comments
btw isn't Ninine garcia also on that tune?
Maybe they copied the approach on those 2 mid 90's Fapy recordings...
from the liner notes
"As with the first CD 'Swing Guitars' Hungaria was recorded in a fashion similar to that used by Django Reinhardt and Stephanne Grappelli in the mid 1930's.
A very few photographic references, and a lettle experimentation pointed towards using one principal microphone (in our case BBC circa 1938) for the whole band, and one or two ambience mics to high light different dynamics.
Each track is a live performance with no drop-ins, clean ups, overdubs, and the mix was altered only by moving our chairs. The slightest movement altered greatly the tone and volume of each individual instrument.
The quality of sound, strictly monophonic, with flat dynamic range, poor frequency response and absence of harmonics we found to be a bi-product of playing and recording in a style long forgotten by most, and longed for by others".
stu b
I have Cubase and have used a VST plug in to achieve that old worn out sound. From what I understand VST plug ins should work with Cakewalk - unfortunately I can't locate the plug in on my machine but here's a link to a site which will let you download it for free after registering
http://www.izotope.com/products/audio/vinyl/#
hope that helps
Alan
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Here's a pic of the control panel:
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles