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Audio Terms For Tonal Accuracy
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nigel1977
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Joined: 27 Apr 2004
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 10:08 am
   Post subject: Audio Terms For Tonal Accuracy
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Airy: Spacious. Open. Instruments sound like they are surrounded by a large reflective space full of air. Good reproduction of high-frequency reflections. High-frequency response extends to 15 or 20 kHz.

Bassy: Emphasized low frequencies below about 200 Hz.

Blanketed: Weak highs, as if a blanket were put over the speakers.

Bloated: Excessive mid-bass around 250 Hz. Poorly damped low frequencies, low-frequency resonances. See tubby.

Blurred: Poor transient response. Vague stereo imaging, not focused.

Boomy: Excessive bass around 125 Hz. Poorly damped low frequencies or low-frequency resonances.

Boxy: Having resonances as if the music were enclosed in a box. Sometimes an emphasis around 250 to 500 Hz.

Breathy: Audible breath sounds in woodwinds and reeds such as flute or sax. Good response in the upper-mids or highs.

Bright: High-frequency emphasis. Harmonics are strong relative to fundamentals.

Chesty: The vocalist sounds like their chest is too big. A bump in the low-frequency response around 125 to 250 Hz.

Clear: See Transparent.

Colored: Having timbres that are not true to life. Non-flat response, peaks or dips.

Crisp: Extended high-frequency response, especially with cymbals.

Dark: Opposite of bright. Weak high frequencies.

Delicate: High frequencies extending to 15 or 20 kHz without peaks.

Depth: A sense of distance (near to far) of different instruments.

Detailed: Easy to hear tiny details in the music; articulate. Adequate high-frequency response, sharp transient response.

Dull: See dark.

Edgy: Too much high frequencies. Trebly. Harmonics are too strong relative to the fundamentals. Distorted, having unwanted harmonics that add an edge or raspiness.

Fat: See Full and Warm. Or, spatially diffuse - a sound is panned to one channel, delayed, and then the delayed sound is panned to the other channel. Or, slightly distorted with analog tape distortion or tube distortion.

Full: Strong fundamentals relative to harmonics. Good low-frequency response, not necessarily extended, but with adequate level around 100 to 300 Hz. Male voices are full around 125 Hz; female voices and violins are full around 250 Hz; sax is full around 250 to 400 Hz. Opposite of thin.

Gentle: Opposite of edgy. The harmonics - highs and upper mids - are not exaggerated, or may even be weak.

Grainy: The music sounds like it is segmented into little grains, rather than flowing in one continuous piece. Not liquid or fluid. Suffering from harmonic or I.M. distortion. Some early A/D converters sounded grainy, as do current ones of inferior design. Powdery is finer than grainy.

Grungy: Lots of harmonic or I.M. distortion.

Hard: Too much upper midrange, usually around 3 kHz. Or, good transient response, as if the sound is hitting you hard.

Harsh: Too much upper midrange. Peaks in the frequency response between 2 and 6 kHz. Or, excessive phase shift in a digital recorder's lowpass filter.

Honky: Like cupping your hands around your mouth. A bump in the response around 500 to 700 Hz.
Mellow: Reduced high frequencies, not edgy.

Muddy: Not clear. Weak harmonics, smeared time response, I.M. distortion.

Muffled: Sounds like it is covered with a blanket. Weak highs or weak upper mids.

Nasal: Honky, a bump in the response around 600 Hz.

Piercing: Strident, hard on the ears, screechy. Having sharp, narrow peaks in the response around 3 to 10 kHz.

Presence: A sense that the instrument in present in the listening room. Synonyms are edge, punch, detail, closeness and clarity. Adequate or emphasized response around 5 kHz for most instruments, or around 2 to 5 kHz for kick drum and bass.

Puffy: A bump in the response around 500 Hz.

Punchy: Good reproduction of dynamics. Good transient response, with strong impact. Sometimes a bump around 5 kHz or 200 Hz.

Rich: See Full. Also, having euphonic distortion made of even-order harmonics.

Round: High-frequency rolloff or dip. Not edgy.

Sibilant: "Essy" Exaggerated "s" and "sh" sounds in singing, caused by a rise in the response around 6 to 10 kHz.

Sizzly: See Sibilant. Also, too much highs on cymbals.

Smeared: Lacking detail. Poor transient response, too much leakage between microphones. Poorly focused images.

Smooth: Easy on the ears, not harsh. Flat frequency response, especially in the midrange. Lack of peaks and dips in the response.

Spacious: Conveying a sense of space, ambiance, or room around the instruments. Stereo reverb. Early reflections.

Steely: Emphasized upper mids around 3 to 6 kHz. Peaky, nonflat high-frequency response. See Harsh, Edgy.

Strident: See Harsh, Edgy.

Sweet: Not strident or piercing. Delicate. Flat high-frequency response, low distortion. Lack of peaks in the response. Highs are extended to 15 or 20 kHz, but they are not bumped up. Often used when referring to cymbals, percussion, strings, and sibilant sounds.

Thin: Fundamentals are weak relative to harmonics.

Tight: Good low-frequency transient response and detail.

Tinny: Narrowband, weak lows, peaky mids. The music sounds like it is coming through a telephone or tin can.

Transparent: Easy to hear into the music, detailed, clear, not muddy. Wide flat frequency response, sharp time response, very low distortion and noise.

Tubby: Having low-frequency resonances as if you're singing in a bathtub. See bloated.

Veiled: Like a silk veil is over the speakers. Slight noise or distortion or slightly weak high frequencies. Not transparent.

Warm: Good bass, adequate low frequencies, adequate fundamentals relative to harmonics. Not thin. Also excessive bass or midbass. Also, pleasantly spacious, with adequate reverberation at low frequencies. Also see Rich, Round. Warm highs means sweet highs.

Weighty: Good low-frequency response below about 50 Hz. Suggesting an object of great weight or power, like a diesel locomotive.
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spana
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 10:15 am
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Nice! An audio vocab. they should start teaching this in all schools Laughing

Last edited by spana on Thu Aug 21, 2008 10:18 am; edited 1 time in total
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Racegod
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 10:18 am
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nigel1977,

think next meeting i'll bring up my guitar to assist with a little reference point of sound for the guys...

I can also bring a recorded track of the same guitar, which we can reproduce through a laptop so they can hear the differences...
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SR
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 11:52 am
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takes note of glossary to use in comments next week Mr. Green
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Lance
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 11:56 am
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^LOL
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Soundstream_626
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 12:04 pm
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wow ... didnt know there were so many

and wtf.... tubby? lol
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silent_riot
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 12:13 pm
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These are some of the sound engineering terms that's on the agenda.
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xeon
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 12:25 pm
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nice read.....sticky this!
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rigman00
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 1:15 pm
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good post
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pyromaniax
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 3:40 pm
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Shocked Shocked all those words...good read...
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3stagevtec
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 7:07 pm
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nice! never knew there were so much terms either... and the few i did know, seems as though i had the means wrong too...
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pyromaniax
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 7:17 pm
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STICKY ETT
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3stagevtec
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 9:59 pm
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i like 'sweet' sounding music... Wink

mods if possible, make a Sticky "Best of ICE" thread and put this in it please....
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jeff
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PostPosted: Thu Aug 21, 2008 11:11 pm
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unfortunately people dont read stickies
otherwise 3/4 the threads made here wont be made

good terms to use in test and tune
these terms help reinforce roger's point about same frequencies having different tones
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3stagevtec
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 8:04 am
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jeff wrote:
unfortunately people dont read stickies
otherwise 3/4 the threads made here wont be made

good terms to use in test and tune
these terms help reinforce roger's point about same frequencies having different tones


that's a funny one imo.. but it so accurately describes the differences you hear between the various speaker types...
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jeff
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 8:18 am
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a good analogy would be people's voices

for example males voices all fall within a certain bandwidth of frequencies, but they all sound different!

the pitch amplitude and timbre of the sound even tho they are the same frequencies make the sound sound different, ie in 'different type' of speakers this can be heard
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roger
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 9:02 am
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so much to learn....

good post though

*copied and pasted for future reference*
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crazybalhead
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 9:54 am
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You guys should listen to the SAME voice recorded with different microphones and techniques. This thing eh easy nah!
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Chiney
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 6:36 pm
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STICKY!
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3stagevtec
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PostPosted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:00 pm
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bump for sticky material..
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