Our church kicked off their stewardship campaign by hosting a dinner last Saturday night. Before the meal, members who had interesting "gifts" or interests set up tables to share these interests. One gentleman makes tin soldiers. Another lady makes beautiful stained glass.
I decided to discuss record collecting and audio restoration. I set up an amp and some speakers hooked up to a laptop running DC6. I took in a few "raw" files and gave a scaled down demonstration, mostly using the EZ filter to cut down on time and technical discussion. I first applied the correct rollover to the flat EQ file and demonstrated how much better correct EQ sounded. They were impressed by that.
I then took the EQ'd file into the EZ filter. Since it takes the adaptive filters a second or two to settle in, they were able to hear the noise just melt away. It was fun to watch them get excited about the result.
I had a constant audience during the demonstration period and many told me they thought my demo was the most fascinating exhibit they saw!
I also found a member or two who knew their vintage recordings. One had heard some Luisa Tetrazzini records and felt she was the finest soprano he'd ever heard (he's a music professor).
It was a fun evening for all. The biggest problem was tactfully declining requests to restore old BeeGee records. ;-)
Doug
I decided to discuss record collecting and audio restoration. I set up an amp and some speakers hooked up to a laptop running DC6. I took in a few "raw" files and gave a scaled down demonstration, mostly using the EZ filter to cut down on time and technical discussion. I first applied the correct rollover to the flat EQ file and demonstrated how much better correct EQ sounded. They were impressed by that.
I then took the EQ'd file into the EZ filter. Since it takes the adaptive filters a second or two to settle in, they were able to hear the noise just melt away. It was fun to watch them get excited about the result.
I had a constant audience during the demonstration period and many told me they thought my demo was the most fascinating exhibit they saw!
I also found a member or two who knew their vintage recordings. One had heard some Luisa Tetrazzini records and felt she was the finest soprano he'd ever heard (he's a music professor).
It was a fun evening for all. The biggest problem was tactfully declining requests to restore old BeeGee records. ;-)
Doug
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