Hey guys can you hear me mp3




















Not going to have a perfect outcome! And "professional" in any field should mean Perfect. There are several people who will argue that using mp3 a degraded format doesn't matter. That a song can be perfect using a file with data loss and artifacts is fine. I'd then have to ask those same people why they purchased a good preamp, and good converters?

Their answer will be "because better preamps and conversion capture the purest signal and present the clearest picture" So obviously capturing true clarity and fidelity is important, so downplaying the effect of a bad source sound like mp3 is silly at best and hypocrisy at worst.

Also consider this. The mp3 file beat was first created as a wav file. You load it and record it, most likely converting it to wav file first. Did you count how many times we went through a conversion process and how many times we switched file types? This process removes us further and further away from the original clean sound, drags it through the mud, and can not allow for everything to still come out clean and pretty.

Don't take short cuts and expect full results. Well, the real world scenario is that mp3 stereo tracks are getting more common.

Learning to mix them the best you can will make you money. Claborn Are essentially saying that a person should compete with the lowest common denominator? Sure it's more present than before. Because the level of knowledge, patience and commitment to making perfection has diminished due to quick fixes and no standard being held.

Video isn't doing this. Sure people are using cheap cams for cheap movie projects. We usually call those "B Movies". Compare them to Avatar and we see what quality is.

So now we film a full movie on out iPhone and ask why our film doesn't look as good as Transformers pt 6? Because you didn't do what they did, starting at the most essential parts.

Everyday someone posts Id start with doing some of what he did. Are good songs out from simple mp3? They were probably created by great engineers though to begin with. I have watched just as much YouTube video on production as everyone here. I have yet to hear a serious producer say that he used a mp3 AND name the song that actually Charted.

The mixtape or leaks But name the single that charted. Better than that name 5, if you're saying its that common. Claborn The mixtape or leaks I agree with most of the post in regard to using mp3 tracks when mixing and finalizing music in a song.

I was mixing a Mixtape for a rapper back in and he gave me various mp3 commercial Top 20 instrumentals that he wanted to record over along with a few original tracks I produced for him. When the mixtape was finalized he was a little upset with the Mp3 instrumentals he recorded over because of its unclear instruments sounds. He become belligerent nothing usual with most of these guys who don't understand sound quality but they want a dubbed type mix copy of a copy to sound original Claborn I'm not going to say that it isn't being done.

I will dare to say that its not the preferred method of ANY engineer. All the secrets given Away in today's market, I have yet to read an article or see a YouTube video with a producer sayin that he Charted a mp3 based song. If you don't want to drop a name from privacy I respect that, but if you have a link to an article or interview I would appreciate it if you posted it.

Engineers will ultimately mix anything thrown at them but it is not the preferred way. Cool beat, wheres the multitrack wav? MC: I aint got it Engineer: Well can you get it?

MC: Naaaw I coped this online. Engineer: I did what I could but next time if you can get the wav files I can make it sound pro.

MC: Oh ok Engineer: Now pay me! Welcome to the Music Industry! That's exactly what im saying. I don't know you. So to discount what you say about mp3 based recording making it to the charts would be silly.

You are likely right! I don't agree with it being common though. Question: Has a guy ever come in with a mp3, you asked if he had the wav? YES Has a guy ever come in with a wav and you asked him for the mp3? NO Also you stated, as I predicted that you, would that an engineer ultimately needs to get paid for work, and doesn't always care about the final product. Especially since no common fan not those who work with audio ever care about who mixed anything.

They ask 2 questions. Are people pretending to be in multi-million dollar studios with a full scale deal? But equally, several big names have confessed to using work arounds and short cuts like pulling a stock loop from GarageBand, or not knowing synths and primarily using presets. So if they'll admit to that, I don't find it too far fetched that they'd tell about mp3 records. Remember Sean Kingston? He didn't create some elaborate lie. He said he got signed by posting work on MySpace and spamming everybody consistently.

He could have said that he was signed to a managment deal, had money, recorded with a big shot in a great studio. Could it happen, yes - but I've definitely rubbed elbows with some important people. In fact one engineer I know very well on a personal level, is a Grammy Vote Panelist and has never said anything like that to me about a charted artist.

Hes said he's worked with mp3s and some of it came out good, or terrible, but hes never said that he saw a charted single delivered to radio from a mp3 based production. Anything is possible, but when you state that it's common practice I have a hang with that. I didn't say common practice Jimmy Stewart Water Higgins Nemo Sweetness Set Two. Example 1 Padgett's Profile Search 4 Morning Song Ringo Show Biz Kids No Reason To Cry.

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