I haven't used that, but I own the Edirol R-09, which is pretty similar in overall specification. I was amazed how good it was when I first borrowed one and tested it. The built-in microphones are decent, but by plugging in a studio microphone (with an external amplifier too, as the Edirol's one is disappointing, the weakest point about it) I can get full commercial-CD-standard recordings. Pretty much the perfect tool for musicians recording themselves under any conceivable conditions - including covert!
Oh, well, the Zoom and the Edirol are as far as I remember quite similar prices here in the UK. If the Zoom's half price where you live then I can see the attraction!
edit: nevermind, I decided to just go buy one.
...I'm curious now...could you post a recording using the H2 sometime? That'd be awesome!
I've used the zoom h4 on my posted recs, ie scarlatti and mozart. But with external mics, pair of TSM large membrane cardioids for scarlatti, pair of Behringer ECM8000 ultra-small membrane omnis for mozart. The built in mics didn't work well with grand piano. Wrong stereo image. Generally you need spaced microphones, like 50-60cm between the two, to get a natural sounding stereo.The sound itself is quiet and clean, but not great. The best reason to buy one, or a h2 I guess, is that they are extremely practical, dead easy to use, take no space and sound good enough to monitor ones own playing, or to make a decent demo if you connect the H4 to external mics.
Generally you need spaced microphones, like 50-60cm between the two, to get a natural sounding stereo.
Not to my ears you don't. That gives something vaguely spatial but not in any meaningful sense stereo. Crossed coincident microphones (figure-8 or omni) is the way to get proper stereo - anything is just special effects.
Stereo is based on our natural hearing, which would make coincidental stereotechniques the least 'natural', as our ears are not in the same physical spot. ORTF and 'dummyhead' are the two techniques that try to emulate that.Anyway, all techniques are 'special effects' in some way, as they try to electronically manipulate the sound to resemble how we hear things in real life.
One problem with spaced stereo is that it doesn't transfer well to mono, due to the phase-differences. Classical recording-engineers though still favored spaced techniques because they argued that classical listeners usually preferred high-quality playback systems, meaning the monocompatiblity problem was a less acute for them. Spaced techniques (mainly A-B or 'Decca-tree') always gave a more spacious sound, which suited orchestral recordings, and large-size instruments like a concert grand much better than coincidental techniques, which tend to give a very 'small' soundpicture. AB and Decca-tree have been the main classical stereo techniques since the '50s.
You mean figure-8 and cardioids.
Spaced (by 20cm) works over headphones but for loudspeaker listening crossed-coincident is the only stereo technique that has any basis in science, as was rather cleverly proved by Alan Blumlein about 75 years ago.
Stereo recordings made this way, and properly played back (which effectively means omnidirectional or figure-8 speakers - yes, I do mean onmi this time! - at somewhere around 90 to 120 degrees separation as seen from the listening seat), have at least a fighting chance of giving _accurate_ soundfield reconstruction in at least the quadrant directly in front of the listener.
As Danilo has already mentioned, stereo is based on whether intensity or time differences (or both together). The Blumlein relies on intensity diference, and spaced techniques on time difference. Both differences are equally "scientific" and both have the same effect, as far as our brain perceives stereo effect.
No, Blumlein relies just as much on time difference. The point is that both ears hear both loudspeakers. If you do the sums (it's vector addition, so be careful!), you find that a difference in intensity only between the channels translates into a difference in phase (time) as the sound arrives at the ears. Spaced techniques get this wrong when played on loudspeakers, though despite that they can manage pretty good imaging - the brain is really quite forgiving.
Dummy-head techniques do work better than a simple ORTF head-spaced pair but they are after all only a more sophisticated version of ORTF.
Omni speakers - and indeed fig-8 - have a look at www.linkwitzlab.com He's got some very convincing arguments, and practical implementations too.
This game of intellectual tennis is keeping me awake at night.Thal
This game of intellectual tennis is keeping me awake at night.
speed of propogation of different frequencies in air is different
Thal, old son, you need to get out more. Mind you, so do I...
I suggest we all go back to using these.Far less complex and the results were satisfactory.No Plutos or Orions required.Thal
QuoteIn fact, the situation is much more complicated than that, as in addition, speed of propogation of different frequencies in air is different, so the time/phase domain varies every moment, depending on a frequency content.Only very minutely - as far as I remember (the relevant reference book is on a shalf I need a ladder to reach) it's barely 1% difference over the entire audio band.
In fact, the situation is much more complicated than that, as in addition, speed of propogation of different frequencies in air is different, so the time/phase domain varies every moment, depending on a frequency content.
On the other hand, going off at an interesting and somewhat relevant tangent, the effective speed of sound from a piano to the audience is actually very variable with frequency, for reasons I'm too much of a tease to explain until at least someone has had a guess at it.
Of course, the speed of propagation is constant (as showed by wavelength/time/frequency relationship), however, the reflections, diffractions, and absorbtion of high frequencies are of importance and the phase shift on high frequencies can be significant.
How one thing leads to another! I checked out your Korg link, then checked the local shop for a price, then saw that they had a used Tascam DA-P1 (portable DAT recorder with mic pres and phantom) for sale really cheap, so I went and bought that. At 1/14 of the original list price. So 1 bit technology will have to wait another ten years until they become obsolete and cheap. (Though Korg claims otherwise.)
Yes, i agree with this.
No, the reason is this. A piano has finite size and therefore, although at high frequencies it projects sound directly to the audience, in the bass it behaves as a point source, i.e. a spherical radiator. The transition frequency will be somewhere around 60-100Hz, I reckon. Low frequencies therefore spread out round the room and the intensity arriving at a typical seat in a concert hall will actually grow for a few tens of ms after the onset of the note, whereas at high frequencies almost all the sound arrives direct and starts to decay rapidly thereafter. So effectively the low bass arrives late, as perceived. This is one reason (not the only one) why playing the left hand a little before the right can be effective, especially when it is down in the bottom octave or two of the keyboard.