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Practical Recording Techniques covers all aspects of recording, perfect for beginning and intermediate recording engineers, producers, musicians, and audio enthusiasts. Filled with tips and shortcuts, this hands-on, practical guide gives advice on equipping a home studio (whether low-budget or advanced) and suggestions for set-up, acoustics, effects, choosing mics and monitor speakers, and preventing hum. This best-selling guide also instructs how to mike instruments and vocals, judge recordings and improve them, work with MIDI and loops, do mastering, and put your music on the web. Two chapters cover live recording of classical and popular music.
New in the seventh edition:
Complete update of all types of recording equipment, plug-ins, and recording software
Increased focus on current industry and classroom trends like DAW signal flow and operation (during recording and mixdown), while still covering analog fundamentals
Updated organization to focus and break up topics
Updated tips on optimizing your computer for multitrack recording – for both Windows and Mac
New sections on streaming audio, mobile-device recording, live recording with digital consoles, and psychoacoustics
Listen Online boxes highlight where audio samples on the website relate to chapter discussions
Updated companion website with audio examples, articles, and suggested activities, plus expanded and more user-friendly links to the best sites for videos and articles, recording techniques, equipment, and other learning resources. Instructors can download figures from the book, the audio files, and a test bank
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
CHAPTER 1: A Basic Overview of the Recording Process
CHAPTER 2: Sound and Psychoacoustics
CHAPTER 3: Studio Acoustics
CHAPTER 4: Signal Characteristics of Audio Devices
CHAPTER 5: Equipping Your Studio
CHAPTER 6: Monitoring
CHAPTER 7: Microphones
CHAPTER 8: Microphone Technique Basics
CHAPTER 9: Microphone Techniques for Instruments and Vocals
CHAPTER 10: Equalization (EQ)
CHAPTER 11: Effects and Signal Processors
CHAPTER 12: Mixers and Mixing Consoles
CHAPTER 13: Digital Audio
CHAPTER 14: Computer Recording
CHAPTER 15: DAW Signal Flow
CHAPTER 16: DAW Operation
CHAPTER 17: Judging Sound Quality with Critical Listening
CHAPTER 18: MIDI and Loops
CHAPTER 19: Session Procedures
CHAPTER 20: Mastering and CD Burning
CHAPTER 21: On-Location Recording of Popular Music
CHAPTER 22: On-Location Recording of Classical Music
CHAPTER 23: Web Audio, Streaming, and Online Collaboration
APPENDIX A: dB or Not dB
APPENDIX B: Optimizing Your Computer for Multitrack Recording
APPENDIX C: Impedance
APPENDIX D: Phantom Power Explained
APPENDIX E: Legacy Recording Devices
AUDIO GLOSSARY
INDEX
Practical Recording Techniques covers all aspects of recording,
perfect for beginning and intermediate recording engineers,
producers, musicians, and audio enthusiasts. Filled with tips and
shortcuts, this hands-on, practical guide gives advice on equipping
a home studio (whether low-budget or advanced) and suggestions for
set-up, acoustics, effects, choosing mics and monitor speakers, and
preventing hum. This best-selling guide also instructs how to mike
instruments and vocals, judge recordings and improve them, work
with MIDI and loops, do mastering, and put your music on the web.
Two chapters cover live recording of classical and popular music.
New in the seventh edition: Complete update of all types of
recording equipment, plug-ins, and recording software Increased
focus on current industry and classroom trends like DAW signal flow
and operation (during recording and mixdown), while still covering
analog fundamentals Updated organization to focus and break up
topics Updated tips on optimizing your computer for multitrack
recording - for both Windows and Mac New sections on streaming
audio, mobile-device recording, live recording with digital
consoles, and psychoacoustics Listen Online boxes highlight where
audio samples on the website relate to chapter discussions Updated
companion website with audio examples, articles, and suggested
activities, plus expanded and more user-friendly links to the best
sites for videos and articles, recording techniques, equipment, and
other learning resources. Instructors can download figures from the
book, the audio files, and a test bank
The practice of plural marriage, commonly known as polygamy,
stirred intense controversy in postbellum America until 1890, when
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints first officially
abolished the practice. "Elder Northfield's Home," published by A.
Jennie Bartlett in 1882, is both a staunchly antipolygamy novel and
a call for the sentimental repatriation of polygamy's victims. Her
book traces the fate of a virtuous and educated English immigrant
woman, Marion Wescott, who marries a Mormon elder, Henry
Northfield. Shocked when her husband violates his promise not to
take a second wife, Marion attempts to flee during the night,
toddler son in her arms, pulling her worldly possessions in his toy
wagon. She returns to her husband, however, and the balance of the
novel traces the effects of polygamy on Marion, Henry, and their
children; their eventual rejection of plural marriage; and their
return to a normal and healthy family structure.
Nicole Tonkovich's critical introduction includes both historical
contextualization and comments on selected primary documents,
providing a broader look at the general public's reception of the
practice of polygamy in the nineteenth century.
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