In article , Phil
Allison scribeth thus
Don Pearce wrote:
-------------------------
Try this. This me in my local church, which is closed for refurb. Just
a pair of mics stood in the nave. Sorry about the playing - I
completely screw the timing at one point (I blame Claire who was
turning pages for me).
Anyway, this is totally raw - no compression or anything.
https://soundcloud.com/donpearce/widor-toccata
** Wow - Don can really play !!!!
Plus a rather nice recoding of a sweet sounding instrument.
Please tell us something about it - Don.
The Bach T&F is well worth a listen too.
Talk about " hiding your light under a bushel " !!
Thanks...
Kind of a bog standard three manual church organ from the late
Victorian period. It had its manual bellows replaced by a motor in the
early fifties, so I never got to play it hand-cranked. But they did
know how to make nice instruments around the 1880s. I think it got
tuned up and serviced about five years ago.
Vox Humana and Diapason are its strong voices and I used both on these
recordings.
** Must sound spectacular live in the actual church.
The recording was made with a pair of Rode NT1-A cardioids in a rough
ORTF arrangement.
** Good Aussie built mics used cleverly !!
OFTF is a variation on the famous "Blumlein pair" method which gives natural
sounding ambience to a recording.
Even on my PC speakers, the "sound" of the church was obvious.
Nice going.
..... Phil
Couldn't agree more a very nice "light" sound to it and yes, those
simple mic arrangements sometimes cam be excellent, sounds fine here on
the Quads
Used to do this sort of thing many years ago wife was in the Long
Melford choral society, pub first practice or performance second! OK
there were a few errors but with simple mic arrangements was this very
real "there" sound, still got the tapes done on a high speed Revox.
As the Widor remember one day was at Ely Cathedral and there was an
excellent rendition of this work someone just having a practice in the
middle of the afternoon. Just after it fished there was a slip of a girl
can't have been much more that around 12 or so years old just asked her
was it you playing she nodded, seemed in a way that she was just too
young! but she was real fan of his and one of his French contemporaries
Henri Mulet who it seems still undiscovered a very talented girl and
knowledgeable too.
--
Tony Sayer