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- Newsgroups: alt.guitar
- Path: sparky!uunet!world!muller
- From: muller@world.std.com (James L Muller)
- Subject: Re: Sound reinforcement
- Message-ID: <C1Anvn.59q@world.std.com>
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- References: <1993Jan22.175058.28739@ncsu.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 06:40:34 GMT
- Lines: 39
-
- In <1993Jan22.175058.28739@ncsu.edu> npstewar@eos.ncsu.edu
- (NATHAN PHILLIP STEWART) writes:
- >Sound Re-inforcement Handbook is written by Gary Davis & someone else
- >(Jones I think.)
-
- Yes, it is Jones.
-
- >SRH is IMO an excellent book. It covers the acoustic and electrical theory
- >appliccable to Sound Reinforcement in a concise, clear way.
-
- I would beg to differ on this. SRH is an excellent description of some
- of the technical stuff, like power levels, maximizing SNR (as you said),
- making proper connectins, and an overview of various sorts of equipment.
- If you want a good description of the difference between dBm, dBu, dBv,
- dBw, etc., then this book is great.
-
- HOWEVER... Its biggest strength is also its biggest weakness. It spends
- almost all its page space on equipment, not on either (a) how to use that
- equipment properly (not to mention how to mix well, etc.), and (b) how
- *sound* itself behaves. These points, how sound behaves (or misbehaves!)
- and how to use equipment to accomplish things desirable rather than un-
- desirable, are the two biggest factors in doing sound reinforcement well
- or poorly. The pro sound company may benefit from this book but not the
- novice, and the original question was for advice for the sound-reinforcement-
- impaired (or idiot, or some other self-deprecating term). How many bands
- wire up their own mic cables? You may to need to fix a broken one every
- so often, but otherwise, hey, you goes to the store and you buys them for
- maybe $7 apiece and then you plugs them in, that's all. It's nice to know
- that parametric EQ's and graphic EQ's and notch filters exist, but what do
- you do with them? This book offers not a clue, assuming, I guess, that it
- must be obvious. Well, it isn't always obvious, even to people who have
- been in the business for a long time. If you want to be an equpiment-freak,
- then study SRH religiously, but if you want to make the band sound good,
- learn some acoustics and wave-propagation theory, some feedback and
- interference theory, how to listen, what can possibly go wrong (with the
- sound, not the equipment), and a whole bunch of tricks that come with
- 'xperience. IMHO, there is no good book for this, certainly not SRH.
- --
- Jim Muller muller@world.std.com
-