MorkofOrk

joined 1 year ago
[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

My field recorder! Chilling after band practice right now, and being able to clearly listen back to my jams has been invaluable in progressing my musicianship.

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I also think this won't hurt the CRT at all

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Oh! Actually I've seen something similar done before with a modular synth! There's this awesome Instagram profile called Ellingson.tv with a guy that uses modular synths to manipulate CRTs and combines that idea with a "Pepper's Ghost" hologram effect. Highly recommend checking it out

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (4 children)

My background is in audio engineering & live sound, so I'm not sure about the specifics of those ports. But there is zero risk of frying anything with the signal generated from a guitar, even an acoustic w/preamp. You would need orders of magnitude more power to do any damage, like if you plugged the 1/4" inch into a power amp designed for passive speakers (which can take the same 1/4" input as a guitar for some stupid reason.) I have to imagine that the only interaction happening within the CRT is directly with the built in speakers, so even if you did that crazy thing the speakers would blow but the video might still work (kinda want to see what would happen here lol, we need one of those YouTubers who like to break things.) For you though, the worst that would happen is the signal getting distorted and sounding horrible. My guess is either port would work granted you have the right adapter, and I actually think you're more like to hear something from an acoustic because of the slight boost from the preamp. All this to say there's nothing to worry about, but it's a lot of work for something silly, I'm sure you could make the world's worst amp with it if you try hard enough, seems like it should work to me.

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (6 children)

The only way you'll blow your CRT is if you tried to plug that dongle monstrosity into the speaker output of a power amp haha, guitars have a high impedance signal. Direct boxes actually lower the impedance, so that definitely won't help make your output safer. (Still safe) So I say go for it directly from the guitar, the worst that can happen is nothing, (which is likely) which probably means you actually do need to lower the impedance with a direct box. (Which I still doubt would work but who knows) An amp with a line out or a digital pedal board would be the most likely options for actually getting sound through.

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

Same issue I mentioned in my comment! There's a constant battle happening between the audio engineers and the noise floor of the the venue. It surprisingly doesn't take too much more db to be heard above the crowd, like in a perfect world, if the crowd is sitting at 90db then 95db would be ideal. But unfortunately a crowd's loudness ebs and flows and that can easily get drowned out so most just default to 100db and embrace the inevitable tinnitus. I recommend everyone invest in Earasers or something of that quality so y'all can appreciate music safely without losing all of the dynamics.

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 17 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I'm taking live sound classes at my community college right now and we talked about this yesterday. The biggest issue with a large venue packed with people is the noise floor is very high. For instance if the crowd is 90db, then you've only got 10-20db of headroom to work with. 90db is already enough to cause hearing damage after 8 hours, and it gets exponentially worse with just a few db more, by 100 you can only safely be in that for 2 hours and that is generally the ideal loudness for that kind of venue. Of course since the engineers probably have hearing loss, they tend to raise it even higher to 110 which is loud enough to still cause damage over time even with regular earbuds unfortunately. So unless you can have a quiet crowd there is nothing you can do about needing ear protection, I recommend hanging by the engineer booth because they tend to be just far enough away to comfortably hear everything around 90db because they generally can't use earbuds while actively mixing.

[–] MorkofOrk@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Random unrelated thought I just had, can you guys think of any interesting musical applications to a laser microphone? I found this super cool video when I tried to look it up (there's practically nothing)

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ja6gsoNJCY