Thanks once again Jay! This was my narration. This video has been incredibly helpful. I currently record in an office which is 2.5m by 3m. I use 3 large acoustic panels, though I call them bass traps as they are about 6 inches thick. They help with resonance, but to be honest, I think the time has come to sort myself out with a booth, as I feel the space I record in is just a bit too big for spoken word. My mic used for the sample you focused on was a CAD E100SX. The other sample was recorded with my new TLM 102, which I adore. I currently use Fab Filter 3 for my EQ which I'm quite happy with, but will look trying Nectar is it looks really good when you're using it. Your EQ tips have been incredibly helpful. I will be sure to apply everything you have mentioned here, and report back in the comments. My processing was just a high pass filter at 60hz. The 340hz resonance you mentioned is something I never picked up on before, so will be sure to look at this. Thanks for going into so much detail on this. You are the best voice-over UA-cam channel by a long way.
Once you find the EQ settings for a recording (e.g. an audiobook chapter), will the same EQ settings work for future recordings (later chapters in the same audiobook) if the audio recording space (mic position, room treatment, mic gain, etc.) remains the same?
Thanks once again Jay! This was my narration. This video has been incredibly helpful. I currently record in an office which is 2.5m by 3m. I use 3 large acoustic panels, though I call them bass traps as they are about 6 inches thick. They help with resonance, but to be honest, I think the time has come to sort myself out with a booth, as I feel the space I record in is just a bit too big for spoken word. My mic used for the sample you focused on was a CAD E100SX. The other sample was recorded with my new TLM 102, which I adore. I currently use Fab Filter 3 for my EQ which I'm quite happy with, but will look trying Nectar is it looks really good when you're using it. Your EQ tips have been incredibly helpful. I will be sure to apply everything you have mentioned here, and report back in the comments. My processing was just a high pass filter at 60hz. The 340hz resonance you mentioned is something I never picked up on before, so will be sure to look at this. Thanks for going into so much detail on this. You are the best voice-over UA-cam channel by a long way.
Rock on! So glad it was helpful, and thanks for the kind word. Let me know if anything else pops up for you ;)
Every day I learned so much from you, Jay! Thank you once again for sharing a great video.
Thanks mate! 😊
Nice advice once again, thanks.
Thanks Ray!
A simple high pass & Mic placement is the best eq
Thanks a ton Jay Appreciate your work!!😋
Once you find the EQ settings for a recording (e.g. an audiobook chapter), will the same EQ settings work for future recordings (later chapters in the same audiobook) if the audio recording space (mic position, room treatment, mic gain, etc.) remains the same?
Generally yes!
I use a TLM 102, what's your basic TLM EQ?
Basically what I showed!