Stereo operation, Cables – fact and fiction, 8 about empirical labs – Empirical Labs EL-DS User Manual

Page 8: About empirical labs, Example settings, Stereo operation & 5.1 surround use, Cable facts… and fiction, Vocals, Various instruments elec. guitar, Plucked instruments & acoustic guitar

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Example Settings

Vocals

- One of the worlds favorite vocalists, Frank Sinatra, became so good at ” working the

mic”, moving in when he was singing soft and wanted intimate body, moving back when he belted

and needed to get the higher notes out… he became so proficient that I have heard the engineers

used very little or no EQ his voice. He got the sound at the source. As he sang soft, he would

move in a little closer to the mic, giving his voice an intimacy. He would even turn his head quickly

to the side so certain breaths wouldn’t be heard. Modern singers of every style could learn from

what Frank was doing 40 yrs ago. He pronounced his S’s very soft and short. Here are some tips

that may help prevent needing the De-Esser or any radical EQ.

Pick the right mic, the right distance and the right angle for the singer. The most expensive

mic isn’t always the best mic for a person’s voice. U2’s Bono uses a cheap ol Shure SM58, but…

who could complain about his vocal sound? Moving a person a couple inches in and out from the

mic can make all the difference in the world. Putting the mic up above the person’s mouth around

their nose level can warm things up, avoid pops, and make a singer sound less nasal. A distance of

6 – 10 inches from mouth to mike is common. When a mic is aimed down a little towards the

singer’s mouth, you will be aiming it at their body also, where lots of low frequency resonance

occurs. Conversely aiming it up can work, having the singer sing over the top of the mic.

Remember that a leading cause of “nasality” is the lack of sound and air coming from a persons

nose, so by aiming up or being level with the nose, an engineer can often improve the basic quality

of a voice. Remember to remind the singer they can move slightly in on soft intimate parts, working

the microphone ala “The Frank”.

There are some other dynamic equalizers out there that work pretty well, but… hoping to get a

great vocal sound using one “holy grail” setting on a wildly dynamic vocal is dubious in our minds.

On an occasional overly sibilant vocal, use the standard De-ess mode which is level insensitive.

Adjust the frequency for around 2.5 - 6Khz and adjust the threshold till the sibilants start sounding

natural. If lisping starts occurring, raise the frequency or lower the threshold to lower the De-essing.

The De-esser should only be working on the offending fricatives and sibilants.

Often the sibilants only become a problem after eqing. However, one very useful technique is

to add the high frequencies AFTER the DerrEsser to add overall sheen back into the vocals, where

the De-Essing can’t undo the Eqing. Of course, many aggressive engineers EQ before and after the

De-Essing.

If a vocal is kind of “generally harsh” and “ESS-y”, the high frequency limiter can provide a

smoother sound. This limiter is extremely smooth and will sound pretty natural working on just about

every line of an overly bright vocal. Just make sure that a gentle EQing wouldn’t be a better solution.

The HF Limiter can sometimes give an analog tape-like effect; warming the vocal the harder you hit

the DerrEsser with level.

Various Instruments

Elec. guitar

- If there’s just an occasional peaky note, the normal DS mode can tame specific

notes, taking the harsh freqs out surgically. Analog tape was always a big help with vocals and

electric guitars because it clipped all the pointy peaks and saturated when the high frequencies piled

up. Using the DS dynamic HF limiter can get a verrry tape like affect if used judiciously. We have

found it to be verry useful on overly crunchy plucky guitars, and “spitty” vocals alike.

Bandlimiting the top end can tighten up and quiet the hiss of electric guitars, especially “heavy”

ones. Put the DerrEsser in LP Mode and close down the top end to 8 – 10KHz. You will usually find

you don’t miss these frequencies on heavy distorted guitars at all. It lets the cymbals and vocals etc

have more clarity up there.

Plucked Instruments & Acoustic Guitar

– Sometimes you may want to keep the

dynamic range of a plucked instrument but need to smooth out just the hard front edge of the attack.

The DerrEsser’s HF Limiting is perfect here. Adjust the threshold until you have a smoother, more

natural sound - usually 3 - 10 dB of HF attenuation is enough. In addition to your normal monitoring

levels, listen very softly, and very loudly to the adjusted track to make sure it isn't too dull, or still in

need of "softening". Squeaks from hands sliding on strings can often be “fixed” using the De-Ess

mode judiciously. Problems such as these often become more pronounced after compression, but

the DerrEsser can be effective placed before or after the compressor.

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Stereo Operation & 5.1 Surround Use

The user will usually start by matching the controls on two DerrEsser’s for Multi-Buss use.

Since the units are highly calibrated at the factory, matching the front panel controls will yield highly

accurate frequency response between the two channels. However, often one channel has more

annoying high frequency problems than the other, and different settings are appropriate. The same

applies to 5.1 surround treatment.

Cable Facts… and Fiction

CABLES GENERALLY DO NOT MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE IN SOUND. As long as a cable is

wired properly, shielded properly, and not damaged, no one will be able to hear the difference in a

length of decent cable 40 feet or shorter... regardless of what Munster Cable or anyone tells you!

To our knowledge, no AB/X listening tests have ever found any difference between a short, properly

wired low cost cable, and a premium “audiophile” cable, in low impedance situations. But even

though there are cable companies who have made millions propagating misconceptions (one cable

manufacturer even advertises greater “sincerity”!), some cables are indeed lower impedance, better

shielded, and break-free than others. Mogami is a great price/value in our opinion.

The big “gotcha” is that between patch bays and remote wiring, the accumulative lengths can

exceed 60 ft or more for a professional studio “patch”. These longer lengths can start to show

shortcomings of cables, since the capacitance vs. inductance begins to mount and causes slight

phase shift and high frequency loss, especially in high impedance, low level sources. In fact,

passive” guitars, basses, and microphones are probably your biggest cabling worries.

Speaker cables are generally even less sensitive as long as they are heavy gauge. Stranded

10 – 14 gauge zip cord should handle most anything (for some reason the lower the gauge, the

thicker the wire).

The same applies to the AC power cables. We have seen $150 power cables that are

“tuneable.” This verges on insanity. As long as a $1 six foot AC cable isn’t worn, and is less than 16

gauge, signal processors such as those in a studio will perform just as superbly as with any $150

cable. Do not forget, almost all musical gear has a regulated DC power supply that does an

incredible job at completely isolating whatever flaky AC comes in.

About Empirical Labs

Empirical Labs was founded in 1989 and operated for years as a recording studio in Garfield

NJ. In 1992, Dave Derr, the founder of Empirical Labs Inc, left Eventide after being an engineer on

the design team for the H3000 and DSP4000 Ultra-Harmonizers ™. By 1994, work on a first product,

the Distressor, was underway, and in 1996, the first products were shipped. Gil Griffith came on

board shortly after this, taking Empirical Labs promotions and sales to an international level with his

own company, Wave Distribution. With Gil, a techno-crazy guy with the latest toys, sales jumped

and several employees were added to Empirical to keep up with orders.

We believe there’s always room for a great, fun to use product… a better mousetrap.

Conversely, there’s little room for mediocrity, and so, several Empirical Labs designs were tossed

out early on. If we are lucky, maybe certain parts of the “discarded” product’s circuitry will be used in

later designs. “A FEW GREAT PRODUCTS” has been our guiding dictum.

Empirical Labs takes pride in making customers happy and giving hassle free service.

Someone will always answer the phone here during working hours… we frown upon companies who

waste people’s time with aggravating voice mail, and automated phone “frustration” systems. ELI

makes premium products and believes that our customers should get premium service. We rarely

charge for a failure of a product that was not the result of extreme abuse, even when long out of

warranty. After dealing with so many companies who really don’t seem to care if customers go away

mad, we strive to be a “Good News Company” that leaves it’s customers with a feeling of

satisfaction… AND a desire to do business with us again.

Empirical Labs strives to be an environmentally friendly company. We encourage and give

incentive to its employees to use as little non-replenishable resources as possible. By designing in

serviceability and upgrade ability, we strive to make “non-disposable” products that will still be in use

10,20, even 40 or more years from now. Empirical aggressively recycles, as well as avoids waste,

encouraging suppliers to not send multiple neither copies, nor cover pages on faxes. We try to

reuse paper, packaging, and even parts when possible. We encourage employees to use energy

efficient automobiles, offering cash incentives to buy cars that get over 30mpg. As scary as it is,

global warming may be a real, irreversible phenomena.

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