On Monday, 2 May 2022 at 11:19:18 UTC, Ola Fosheim Grøstad wrote:
>I guess they find excitement in it, where I think of it as poor mastering. And I guess in some genres it is now considered bad mastering if you don't use excessive compression.
I don't think there is any real reason to trust one own taste, as taste is socially constructed (cf. La Distinction from Bourdieu) and - simplifying - it reflects too much of your socioeconomic background to be significative. Music in particular particularly reflects that.
>The french music scene might be different? French "electro" seemed more refined/sophisticated in the sound than many other "similar" genres, but this is only my impression, which could be wrong.
French hiphop was amazing (and is popular) from 2017 to ~2021 but I don't think we have something interesting otherwise. French electro is much less interesting than the Argentinian progressive house scene for example, and that's just my opinion again. A lot of good music gets produced in niches, to get completely ignored nowadays, so it would be hard to say what scene is interesting ; we all get to miss it anyway.
>I didn't understand this one, do you mean that musicians misunderstand what is causing the effect so that they think that it is caused by the main effect, but instead it caused by the internal delay of the unit? Or did you mean something else?
Oversampling typically produces:
A. a phase shift
B. anti-aliasing
but because aliasing is a tiny problem in dynamics processing in the first place, people choose to use it while hearing only (A). Which can sound good by itself. The by-product becomes more desirable than the non-problem it solves. Now everyone wants the feature!
>I do hear a difference when listening to my own mix (maybe because I've spent so many hours analysing it).
If a typically polished song is listened as MP3, then MP3 becomes the norm.
And then what-everyone-else-is-doing sounds sincerely better to our ears. A process you could call "legitimation".
I had a strange conversation about Autotune once with a 20 years old:
- an heavily autotuned voice sounded "normal" and not-autotuned to her
- but the talkbox in Kavinsky - Nightcall sounded ugly to her and "autotuned". She mentionned of course she didn't like the Autotune. But was unable to identify it in practice.