We Have Lift-off!! (NOW IN SURROUND) |
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THE SOUND OF LIFTOFF!
Thanks to the help of a friend at NASA, I was able to record the liftoff of the Space Shuttle Discovery on March 8, 2001 from the Kennedy Space Center VIP viewing site at 3.1 miles from the launchpad (as close as they let anyone get during the launch except for crew members). Also with the courtesy and help of Gary Baldassari, Mike Morgan, and Andy DeGanahl, who supplied some of the equipment used. Andy and I braved the all-nighter and captured the launch at 6:42:09.059 am EST.
9/10/09. We are very pleased to present to you the Shuttle Launch in SURROUND, at 96 kHz/24 bit. This is a free download of the original 4.0 recording (just the shuttle launch, without the music accompaniment). Thanks to Chris of airwindows.com for inventing the asynchronous conversion that allowed me to synchronize the front and surround channels of this recording, which were made on two independent Masterlink recorders. The result is incredibly realistic and natural. If you have a properly bass-managed surround system with high headroom subs (preferably a pair of subwoofers with accurate response) then this recording will knock your socks off. The proper reproduce gain is +7 dB above the Dolby standard calibration. That's right, turn up your monitor gain 7 db higher than the SMPTE standard 83 (or "85") level calibration. The free audio files are only available to Digido.com registered users (it's easy to register, just press the link at the top left of this page). After registering, click on the MEDIA link at top and choose DOWNLOADS. The discrete PCM WAV files can be found in the GENERAL section of DOWNLOADS. OR---you can burn a DVD-A from the Iso image file, also found in the GENERAL section of DOWNLOADS. If you download and can play these files please go the Contact Us page and give me some feedback! Enjoy--- Bob Katz. Technical specs of the recording On the Spectrafoo Audio Analysis It turns out an LFE channel is not needed to reproduce this recording with a properly bass-managed system, because "bass" is the focus of this recording and it requires turning up the gain by 7 dB ABOVE Dolby standard. However, it could not be engineered to reproduce at Dolby Standard monitor gain without redirecting the bass to an LFE channel or it would overload the digital level. But then the bass would not be in stereo, and the shuttle definitely sounds better to me with stereo bass. Thanks for reading! Bob Katz
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