Archive of the former Yahoo!Groups mailing list: The Mellotron Group

previous by date index next by date
previous in topic topic list next in topic

Subject: Re: [newmellotrongroup] Wet or dry

From: lsf5275@aol.com
Date: 2008-02-03

In a message dated 2/2/2008 8:24:11 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, pocotron@yahoo.com writes:
Hi Mark-

I believe that the attack of the sounds is an
issue. The M400's have spoiled us. On a good set of
tapes one can adjust the starts until the attack on
all tracks is just right.

However, the MK2 and M300 probably developed enough
uneven tape stretch over time that the starts didn't
line up anymore. So, re-align the starts. Cycle to a
different station, and the individual starts are
uneven again. To rectify this (somewhat), line up the
starts so all voices are heard instantly on every key
on every station, but loose some attacks in the
process(An possible example of this is on John
Lennon's early recording of "Strawberry Fields"
("Anthology 2")where a tron brass can be heard at the
end with little or no attack). Live with it, layer
it, maybe use a volume pedal, and add reverb to cover
the problem. I bet that many recording engineers used
their own standard formulas for Tron processing, and
just kept using them on the M400's. I think this is
what we are used to hearing on many recordings.

I like the dry sound once in a while. I finally got
a little Alesis mixer w/reverb (effects), and it does
change the "feel", which I also like. PLUS, the
effect creates a stereo effect, which is nice.

My take. Rip it apart.

-Bruce Daily
#1221 (with planks for feet while the paint dries on
the proper feet. Yes, the beastie could downhill ski
right now!!)
 

 
Now I feel like a dick for making fun




Who's never won? Biggest Grammy Award surprises of all time on AOL Music.