Realistic mic modeling expectations, 7 – appendix – Antares TASCAM TA-1VP User Manual

Page 36

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TASCAM TA-1VP

Drum Presets

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18 DrumAlert

Adds weight and snap to drum

kit, adjust model mic proximity to

work kick sound, and Low Pass EQ

to control high end.

19 TiteSnare

Adjust compressor threshold, EQ

1&2 gain to taste.

20 KickEnhance

Will give even a well-recorded kick

drum some spectral enhancement.

Use input level to increase or

decrease the overall effect.

21 LoFoDrLoop

A patch designed to properly

trash a mono beat (or one side of a

drum loop).

Bass Presets

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22 FatBass

Adjust EQ 1 frequency for your

specific mix.

23 FunkBassBeef

Adds power bass and slap sizzle

to funky bass parts — adjust

model mic proximity for low end

response.

24 PopBass

Adjust compressor threshold, EQ 1

frequency, and EQ 2 gain.

Instrument Presets

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25 ElecGtrWarm

Adjust Tube Warmth, EQ 1&2 gain.

26 TheSaxCuts

Adds grit, tone and presence to

saxes. Adjust model mic proximity

for low end thump.

27 MonosynthDbl Enhance and spread out that

mono synth track. You can also use

this one on guitars. Pan outputs R/

L.

28 PianoCuts

Allows piano to peak through a

mix. Adjust modeled mic proximity

for bass response.

29 BrightAcGtr

Adjust compressor threshold, EQ 1

frequency, and EQ 2 gain.

Special Effect Presets

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30 Destructo

Adjust compressor threshold for

desired effect.

31 Telephone

For that special phone moment

— less is more! Depending on

your source level you may need to

boost Output gain.

Utility Presets

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32 LiveVoxFix

Preset built around a live vocal

track recorded at Caesar’s Palace in

Vegas in the ‘60s. Mostly designed

as damage control.

33 GateThatKick

Pumps and isolates the kick drum

from the rest of the kit (and live)

sound. Adjust the gate threshold

to your track.

34 SnareGate

Adjust the gate threshold and

Notch EQ frequency to your track.

35 TomGate

Adjust the gate and compressor

thresholds to dynamics.

Realistic Mic Modeling

Expectations

Although the TA-1VP’s Microphone Modeling seems in

many ways to be almost magic, it is, in fact, simply very

clever science. And as such, it has some limitations that

you must be aware of.
To get the maximum satisfaction out of Mic Modeling, it

is important to have realistic expectations of exactly what

it can and can’t do. (Most of what it can’t do relates to

the physical impossibility of recovering information that

wasn’t in the original signal to begin with.) Here are the

main issues to be aware of:

Choice of Input Microphone

Luckily for all of us, the

general quality of “affordable” microphones has reached

a remarkably high level. Consequently, if you stick

with well-known manufacturers, most any reasonable

quality mic will provide sufficient performance to allow

the TA-1VP to do its processing with good results.
On the other hand, you can’t expect to pick up a cheap

mic and expect the TA-1VP to make it sound like a

classic Neumann U87. If a source mic has massive roll-

off in a particular frequency range, there is no way the

TA-1VP can produce the signal that would have been

captured had the source mic had better response.
Microphone Technique

In getting the best possible

recorded sound, mic technique and placement are at

least as important (if not more so) that mic choice. A

good engineer can record a great track with an SM57

while a poor one can make a U47 sound like a toy. If

your audio is not well-recorded in the first place, the

TA-1VP can to do very little to improve it. If you start

with a poorly recorded track, all the TA-1VP will do is

make it sound like a track that was poorly recorded

with a great mic.
Excessive Frequency Boost

Although the TA-1VP’s

processing does not itself add noise to your signal,

any noise in your original audio or noise added by

intervening processes (e.g., A/D conversion, pre-TA-1VP

dynamics processing, etc.) will be accentuated by any

large amount of frequency boost. This should only

7 – Appendix

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