Anyway, you can get a free trial 6-issue (so one year) subscription from the site. So I gave it a try. The first issue flopped through the door and I decided to have a flick through it while sipping some tea after the nightshift. Here is an actual quote from an article titled "High Velocity Sound Engineering."
It sounds like a pisstake, but the article is given front cover real-estate. Oz Fritz sounds like a made-up name, but a quick google shows he exists and engineers. It's also sandwiched between two legit 'mixing tips' articles. And if it's a pisstake, there is no punchline.Oz Fritz who writes for Tape Op wrote:The method of High Velocity Sound Engineering is the exacting analysis and synergistic comprehension of all the physical and metaphysical factors that determine the architechture [sic] of the sound field. The sound field is postulated as an informational cyberspace matrix existing in various forms as an electrical/acoustic pattern.
Other articles include a two-page interview with a guy who runs a microphone museum in Milwaukee, an in-depth feature on the recording scene in Slovenia, and a short editorial on how cleaning your studio (as in dusting and polishing) will keep your clients coming back.
The useful articles, by the way, are a page each on reducing low-end mud in the mix (180-350Hz, not low end like we're interested in) and Two-stage compression (just like parallel compression, but with an extra compressor at the end of the signal chain).
All this for only US$80 a year!!
Edit: Post #420 btw
