Well, maybe not exactly, but I thought it might be "fun" for (much) later reference to see what was right and wrong about some findings of me.
Already last year's Christmas I was so much surprised that the, say, really old recordings could give so much joy for sound quality. Think about the time recordings started to be in stereo for standard ... which was after the beginnings of The Beatles and the period so many Christmas songs were recorded.
Without now playing such recordings and without reading further, try to imagine why these recordings are perceived as bad and old recordings ...
...
Do you have a clue ?
Ok, because recording techniques weren't on par with todays means, you can say ...
Wrong wrong wrong.
I dare to say : because the recordings techniques from back then implied a "resolution", or a possibly other phenomenon we don't have wordings for yet, were so that they could not be played back 1:1.
And back to the clue I asked about above, this would be my answer from today :
Because of badly represented highs. It sounds raw, roughly smeared, and generally expressed : as bad old recordings.
For a normal human being this leads to nothing else than bad old recordings, but since the earlier versions of Engine#3 showed me at some stage that there's much more in the old cr*p than the old cr*p implies from it's description (old cr*p), it started to intrigue me. Possibly the main reason it started to intrigue is I could not get that back at later Engine#3 versions ...
I think it is one month or so ago, that I started to hear (per the then XXHighEnd version) that something in the highs was changed in such a manner, that highs could be added. Or better : *had* to be added in order to fill up gaps in resolution. Try to imagine : highs started sounding grainy (which might be the opposite of smeared), and the grainy to my perception was caused by missing higher frequency waves. So gaps, where there should be sound. Difficult of course because this is at the micro level, but anyway I perceived it like that.
Well, the logical solution to filling the perceive gaps was easy : crank up the higher frequencies for dB level; if something is there it should come out ...
Note : So this is about mangling with the frequency response curve of the loudspeaker, of which we all say it must be as flat as a pancake.
Not to forget : we are talking about perceived bad old recordings, which at least to my ears could be made concrete by the expression "raw etc. highs".
Ok. No matter how illegal or plain stupid it might be to start such an adventure, I let the frequency curve rise from off 5000Hz so that at 20000Hz there was a 16dB rise ... From 5000 to 20000 quite linearly. Mind you, this implies that the 20000 output is over 5 times as loud as the 5000 output ...
I must honestly say that apart from trying to get away the perceived grainyness, I was attempting to let cymbals and hi-hats output at a level my own drum set creates, keeping the general SPL coming from that in mind, compared with other instruments playing at their normal level with the toms from a drum set as the first reference (those not expressing highs as implied here).
I can tell you ... it worked.
Now an idiot drummer smashing around on the cymbals was perceived as an idiot smashing around on the cymbals. And mind you, listening to the normal frequency curve, this is perceived as -and as you all know- as some cymbals in the back, at far less SPL than reality tells you.
Is that in the recordings ?
Now a few things must be looked at together, and they are not easy to come with a decent explanation, let alone a scientific one :
The increased highs indeed filled up the grainyness.
That by itself *allowed* for increasing the highs in general. I mean, where highs are not good, they should not be over-expressed, right ? In this case they are technically over-expressed, but are perceived as just natural.
There is *no* layer added to voices, as you might expect when highs are well over expressed. This by itself shows that there's just no layer there. But also : the over-expression of highs allowed to happen only just *when* this layer is not there in the base. Appearently XXHighEnd now allows for it ... (and this was not the case in older (one month ago) versions).
To the above list I could add that I cannot imagine that "recording techniques" deliberately squeeze away higher frequencies, although everything is possible.
But now back to the old recordings ...
The first thing old recordings express (normal frequency curve, normal (CD)player) is too much of bad highs.
Well, with the experience now of one month at listening at the uplevelled highs it started to occur to me that old recordings express even more highs. They allow "more fluently" to smash the hi-hat in your face without perceiving it as boosted highs. But the highs are still boosted.
I did not go back to the normal frequency curve to test how the old recordings sound without the high boost, but I would not even like to go back;
Currently I am searching for all the old recordings I have because they sound sooo good and so beautiful. So much more realistic.
The only thing I can think of is that indeed somewhat after the day of poor old recordings, recording engineers started to decrease the level of highs. Mind you, it all fits. With normal playback means, the highs of old recordings sound worse the louder they play. So they really could have done that. But with the "newer" recordings playback of today (well, via XX) you start to hear the gaps. I do. Fill them up again, and all is back to normal.
Play back the old recordings at that same boosted highs level ... to me this doesn't give problems. It is really perceived as a somewhat harder hit at the cymbal.
All is *not* perceived as uneven highs. No hissing, no colouring going away, no layers.
As often, call me crazy ...
Peter
PS: For those who can tweak their frequency curve as indicated, try it ...
PPS: I have no real indication that all should start at 5000Hz. Important or not, no instrument has its fundamental frequency above that (except for maybe a synthesizer and pipe organs).
PPPS: Do note that I apply this at the passive side of the loudspeaker filter, hence it very well can be so that if you pump this kind of crazily boosted highs through your amps things might go wrong *there*.