jimfisheye
2K Club - QQ Super Nova
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2010
- Messages
- 3,534
I have the Dolby software from the mouth of the beast itself. The rendered and encoded file matches the original mix exactly. It's 1:1. There's no "Atmos curve". Or... flat, no eq, would be the "curve".
It's easier to correct resonance issues with eq than bass traps and dampening only in that it's clicking software controls vs physical activity and light construction. Results based though, it's the opposite. Cursory treatment is a LOT more bang for the buck.
This is if you're interested in reproducing a mix. If you just want something to sound good to you regardless of accuracy, well you can do what you want and if it sounds right to you then it is.
My 2c on shitty rooms that you will NOT be treating physically:
Don't go for perfect. It's not going to happen no matter what you try. Just go for 'not fucked'. Keep the eq moves minimized. Just go after the biggest offenders. Back off on extreme moves. Let the room be weird and color the music. You'll end up hearing more in the end. Severe eq leads to phase mayhem and choked sound. I'm not afraid of being ruthless with eq! Diminishing returns are diminishing returns though.
Source: Running live sound in what could more accurately be called caves than rooms in some cases.
Similar advice for behind the mixing board. Up to 8 bands of adjustment on the eq on some track? Going for band #9 now? Yeah... Start over!
It's easier to correct resonance issues with eq than bass traps and dampening only in that it's clicking software controls vs physical activity and light construction. Results based though, it's the opposite. Cursory treatment is a LOT more bang for the buck.
This is if you're interested in reproducing a mix. If you just want something to sound good to you regardless of accuracy, well you can do what you want and if it sounds right to you then it is.
My 2c on shitty rooms that you will NOT be treating physically:
Don't go for perfect. It's not going to happen no matter what you try. Just go for 'not fucked'. Keep the eq moves minimized. Just go after the biggest offenders. Back off on extreme moves. Let the room be weird and color the music. You'll end up hearing more in the end. Severe eq leads to phase mayhem and choked sound. I'm not afraid of being ruthless with eq! Diminishing returns are diminishing returns though.
Source: Running live sound in what could more accurately be called caves than rooms in some cases.
Similar advice for behind the mixing board. Up to 8 bands of adjustment on the eq on some track? Going for band #9 now? Yeah... Start over!