Any way we can stop the automatic wave normalizing going forward?
Also, anyone notice a difference in sound quality between the local air signal 91.5 FM and the web stream signal on your live shows? I'm in range locally so I listen to both air and web.
My show never sounds like the original wave file i encoded when it's airing live on the local air signal 91.5 FM. It's not a big difference but it's noticeable to me. Anyone else? Are the FM air signal EQ settings the same as the webstream EQ settings?
Frank
Rossano Radio
WMFO Community Member
------ Original message------
From: Nick Andre
Date: Fri, Feb 26, 2021 2:16 PM
To: Bob Donovan;
Cc: Andy Sayler;Belinda;Derek Gerry;Edward Beuchert;Frank Rossano;Joann Keesey;Ray Charbonneau;Ronald LaRussa;Savoir Faire;WMFO Operations Director;
Subject:Re: Getting music remotely from Rivendell?
Spotify explicitly bans the use of their library for broadcast purposes FYI.
I’ve never entirely understood any of this licensing nonsense to be honest, it all seems thoroughly illogical 😂
I’m not entirely sure where the line would be:
1. Letting DJs remotely manipulate Rivendell
2. Letting DJs mount a file share and process audio in their computer for broadcast use with the output file never touching their disk
3. Letting DJs download a file for use with their show if they pinky swear not to share it
My understanding is that with Spotify these days there’s not a huge incentive to actually pirate music, literally the only reason people would even want these files is for making shows like this.
Being realistic nobody actually keeps FLAC files around anymore on their local disk so I’d imagine approximately 100% of DJs are not following whatever arcane rules are “required” anyways (ie they probably do not have 70 filing cabinets of CDs ready to explode through the floor of Curtis hall). I would assume that our not knowing this for a fact is important to our capacity to pretend people are doing things correctly.
Side note: we really screwed up with the automatic WAV file normalizing on Rivendell import — we lose two bits of resolution doing that. It would be quite an endeavor to fix the issue going forward. That should not be the default; it’s easy to drop the levels 12 dB when they enter the livewire network and get converted from 16 to 24 bit on the ASI card. I complained some number of years ago about the “auto-trim” feature being on by default and that was fixed. The normalizing is sadly permanent unlike the auto-trim which I was able to undo.
—Nick
I can't think of a faster way to get WMFO closed permanently for illegal file sharing. There is no other way around it.
Side note: this library of questionable legality :-) would have higher sound quality than YouTube conversions, which are 128 kbps copies at best. Better to capture a high quality stream from Spotify, assuming you pay and have that option available.
Still illegal, though. I, of course, would never do either one <snicker>
Makes sense Ed. Instead of the idea (and hassle) from exporting from Rivendell, a shared drive of songs that have already been ripped into Rivendell is a good idea. We're WMFO Radio DJs who lost access to their library of music because of a worldwide pandemic that shutdown pretty much everything, including in person radio studios where the music DJs rely on to spin is located.
I don't think anyone will make a big deal out of it, but always best to get legal advice beforehand imo. Only students and community members affiliated with WMFO would be allowed to access the shared drive of ripped wmfo songs, with the sole purpose of airing them on their show, if the idea Ed mentioned ever materializes.
Frank
------ Original message------
From: Edward Beuchert
Date: Fri, Feb 26, 2021 10:41 AM
To: WMFO Operations Director;
Cc: Belinda;Derek Gerry;nick Andre;Frank Rossano;Bob Donovan;Joann Keesey;Andy Sayler;Ray Charbonneau;Ronald LaRussa;Savoir Faire;
Subject:Re: Getting music remotely from Rivendell?
Excellent questions Jordan!
The PSAs you mentioned I posted on the Google drive were
actually in their original MP3 distribution format as I had
downloaded them from the Ad Council, PETA.org etc. web sites. I
still have a task to *upload* the last PSA batch I posted on the
drive *into* Rivendell, which I will do using the ssh and VNC
utility as Nick Andre described.
Yes, you are absolutely right,
it would be wonderful if there was a way for DJs to remotely
access Rivendell and download songs from our WMFO music library
onto their own computers and mix them into their shows! It's a
topic that's been discussed before on [wmfo-ops], most recently
on May 13, 2020 in an email thread called "Downloading Songs
From Rivendell" started by Frank Rossano. Here is the most
relevant quote in that discussion from Derek Gerry:
We looked into this several years ago
and it was a huge copyright issue. Belinda may be helpful in
untangling the laws in play here, but as I recall it broke
down to this: The digital copy of a song on Rivendell is the
only one that we have a license to use. If anything is copied
onto another hard drive, which would need to happen to do what
Frank is asking, that's piracy.
But beyond the legal issues Derek described, as I briefly
mentioned during your very informative remote broadcast
tutorial, "The grapes are sour anyway!" With my PSA account
privileges, I can export tracks out from Rivendell in .WAV
format and then transfer them to my computer over the internet,
but the problem is that each individual track gets exported to a
blank file name, normalized to - 17dB, without any meta-data.
Sure you can fix that up afterwards typing or cutting and
pasting from the dialog box text, but is that any more
convenient than hijacking Youtube audio using a converter
utility? Since it's all computer data in the end, somebody could
no doubt write scripts to add the Rivendell meta-data
programmatically through an API, but that's a project, and not
the way Rivendell export works for us now (unless I missed an
option to do that ;-o)...
I loved the pre-pandemic WMFO policy of DJs being allowed to
bring in laptops with CD drives, and rip any of the music CDs
around the station into their personal music libraries. Songs
I obtained that way form a
significant part of my own collection, especially in the world,
electronic and rock genres. Conceivably we could implement
something sort of like that "system" for DJs w