Terry Wilson:
Hello, I am hoping someone can offer me some help on this subject, a tinny sound or perhaps a ringing sound, on the middle and melody string on my McSpadden dulcimer. I've tried different tunings, strumming and picking up and down the fret board, and not stroking the strings (or string) as hard. I just made a video this morning that I am waiting to finish posting on You Tube, then I plan to post it on the forum under videos. The song is Shenandoah. The chords are so pretty, but the tinny or ringing sound of the strings mentioned ruins the whole process. It's kind of funny, when I play this song I don't hear the bad sounds, and my wife says the same thing. But when I record, it's very obvious. Perhaps I should change strings? Strings are about a year old, with lots of playing. If it makes a difference, the strings are the same kind that McSpadden installed when new. I would appreciate any suggestions. Maybe when the video posts this will help. Merry Christmas, Terry
I've just listened to your video Terry. Lovely playing!!!
...The chords are so pretty, but the tinny or ringing sound of the strings mentioned ruins the whole process. It's kind of funny, when I play this song I don't hear the bad sounds, and my wife says the same thing. But when I record, it's very obvious....
What I hear Terry is a awful lot of compression on your recording and a loss of highs and lows - plus some unintended reverb. It sounds like your mic'/camera has an automatic volume system that is levelling off all the dynamics and perhaps messing up the timing between the channels. So basically the little noises the strings make are being amplified and the loud noises squashed. If the instrument sounds OK to you when you are playing it then the problem lays with your recording system. All sound recording systems have their own 'voice' as do all playback systems (headphones or speakers). Add to that the fact that the dulcimer is very difficult to record due to its timbre and lack of acoustic volume and you have quite a few problems to overcome. It just isn't that easy to get good recordings of a dulcimer - and when you do you have to make choices about how you want it to sound. For example: Here is a recording of a McSpadden that's pretty much the same as yours. I actually recorded it on a small hand held recorder balanced on the end of my bed - but then mastered it afterwards in audacity.
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Now that McSpadden doesn't sound like the recording and if you were sitting next to me when I recorded that track what you hear in the recording is not what you'd have heard live.
When we hear a dulcimer played live it will sound a certain way but as soon as that instrument is recorded the sound we hear is coloured by the recording device, the processing and the playback device. Basically it is your recording device and (unwanted) processing of the recording that is effecting what you hear when you record your instrument. The instrument itself, when listened to live and acoustically, may be perfectly OK.
Robin
updated by @robin-clark: 12/14/15 06:47:29PM