screamersusa wrote:
I found mixing the live vocal difficult, ear fatigue on certain brand tracks annoying and no "Balls" on tracks that should have them
Ok, so I've touched on this before, but I want to chime in here and give you my 2 cents, take it or leave it. I have tracks that are anywhere from 128 to 320. Some of the tracks that are at 128 sound every bit as good as other higher bit rate tracks. What I have found is there are tracks that are overly compressed during mastering at the studio. I'll give you a couple of examples, both are Sound Choice , Deep Purple - Smoke on the Water & Matchbox 20 - Real World. Smoke On The Water sounds fine until the drums come in, the drums are so squashed by compression that they loose all of their punch, but the track was ripped at 320. On the other hand Real World is recorded at an overall lower volume than most tracks also ripped at 320. These are just two I can think of right off the top of my head. So what can you do about these tracks? Not much except find better ones or deal with what you have.
I have done a number of things in order to try to get the best sound out the speakers I possibly can with the tracks I have. I use Breakaway, a sound plugin I know several people on here have been using for years. An external sound card such as the Lexicon Alpha, also gone over here more times than I care to count. I do a bit of EQing on the channels that the karaoke tracks play on, done with a fully parametric EQ. A small boost in the lows peaking around 50hz, a cut in the mids, which btw is where most ear fatigue comes from, and a small boost in the highs, shelving that starts around 7khz. So with the slight cut in the mid range I have carved out a space for vocals to fit. Some tracks need more of something and some need less but I leave that to my ear to pick out something that just ain't right. EQing vocals as well as adjusting gain or fader on each singer is another novel I could write, but it all plays an important role in how everything fits together and sounds.
So where am I going with this? Well...compression! Were not dealing with a live band here, were dealing with recorded tracks mastered in a studio. So even though we have a live singer we have to try to match the level of compression on the singer to be somewhere close to the level of compression on the track or the vocals will stick out like a sore thumb. And of course we add some effects to gel it all together nicely. There are some tracks that are easier than others to make things fit but for the most part I can get it done no matter if they are 128 or 320. It's a totally different animal than mixing a live band and I've been behind the board for both as well as mixing in the studio, all three are different.
Bottom line for me is this, we are dealing with a bunch of vastly different tracks recorded by different producers, musicians & companies. I think it has a lot less to do with bit rate and a lot more to do with mastering. We as hosts have to recognize with our ear what it takes to make it sound right.