1. Originally posted by ferrari:I like a good live atmosphere, to hear the public. Better less audio quality than a perfect sound and no public noise

    I'm like you. You'll love (or maybe you do already) Vertigo Buenos Aires 2. They go crazy! I don't care that the songs were not performed flawlessly.
    The audience in Saitama is good too (not Latin America or Italian crazy levels). Check the "very good audience" of Saitama I. I prefer it over the matrix since it puts the audience in the front, without "clicks" and the count 1,2,3,4.
  2. I really like Saitama (both, actually) for the above reason. But to be honest I've never given Vertigo Tour bootlegs much thought since the officially released material is of very high quality if you're looking for the music without audience input.
  3. Thanks for the info.

    One Tree Hill as a show closer is quit unique.

    What about the Honolulu show, I have a video and a audio recording, Great live atmosphere and interesting setlist.

    The sound good be better. I have this audio recording:

    BOB's IEM Matrix.

    Are there any better recordings?
  4. Yeah, the Saitama shows were really great
  5. Originally posted by ferrari:What about the Honolulu show, I have a video and a audio recording, Great live atmosphere and interesting setlist.

    The sound good be better. I have this audio recording:

    BOB's IEM Matrix.

    Are there any better recordings?

    The Honolulu show was pretty unique too. Lots of worldwide fans gathered there for the final show of the tour and the atmosphere and setlist were great as you say. Pearl Jam opening and then joining the band during a song (and Billie from Green Day during another) only add to the singularity of the show Oh, and the bootleg and video are great too (the boot you got is already the best version available).


    This is (part of) the infofile from the multicam:

    预格式化:
    Audio:

    Blend of sources: Chrisedge (aud) + Bakerstuff (aud) + Bono IEM
    Mixing: Bob S.

    First off this work is dedicated to the tapers and their generosity in making this happen. The mission for this was to make a recording that sounds like you are in the middle of the sweet spot of the stadium.

    Bakerstuff was used as the primary source as it had very direct sound. Unfortunately it suffered from 2 people that were constantly screaming. A full master was done within protools using primarily a 7 band parametric and light multiband to add definition to the vocals and bass, and finally a subsonic filter to get the low stuff that was just adding mud to the sound. From that, the track was duplicated and applied a high pass filter at 600hz for use as a bottom end filler for Chris’ version.

    Chris’ version was used for ambience, as the taping position was further back. First step is to run in a harmonic balancer and match the sound of Bakers’ version from 600hz through 3k for the filler track during Bakers screamers. Duplicating the track, and narrowing the stereo image to 80% took some of the distance sound out of it to use as the ambience track.

    The IEM obviously is used for vocals. The first step with it was to filter the click track, but because of the style of click it could not be completely removed. Then using eq and aural exciter to fill it out a give it a more natural sound. The big problem with this source was the receiver used to pull it in would loose the frequency every now and again causing static, so this could not be used at all times.

    The last third of the show the wind came up and affected both audience sources at times. I filtered it as best as possible, but since it was so wide across the low and mid frequencies total removal resulted in a very thin sound, so in these areas I used a high pass to at least get the big rumble reduced.

    On to the mixing. Bakers source was set to –6db, Chris’ to –12db and the IEM to –4db as base settings. I crossed the two duplicate tracks as fills for each of the main tracks to remove the screamers.

    This process took 6 months of on and off work, and unfortunately was not fully completed, as the engineering staff at work decided to upgrade the software and it somehow corrupted the file. Due to the complexity of the mix it was impossible to rebuild it and keep going (there are well over 1000 automations).Fortunately I had done a mixdown just to see how things were going. All that was left was the little tweaks, so it’s not that devastating.

    The final mastering was done on Audition2 using a five band parametric for pre, muliband compressor to really level things out. I set the multiband very mildly to mainly use it as a soft limiter to keep the sound from getting out of hand. The final phase was a 1/3 octave for final smoothing.

    Mike this one’s for you! Thanks for everything.
    Hope you all enjoy.

    (Bakerstuff recording)

    Recorded about 30 feet off left side of stage
    CoreSound Binaurals w/bass roll-off > Edirol R-09 > USB Cable > Cool Edit Pro (boost high and low end, add fades) > CD Wave > FLAC Frontend

    (Chrisedge source)
    Source: Sound Professional AT933 Hyper Cardioids > Sound Pro Battery Box (Roll off @ 107Hz) > Sony PCM-M1 (@ 44.1khz)
    Location: KK - 34 Row
    Transfer: Sony PCM-M1 > Core-Sounds 7 Pin to Coax > Zoltrix Nightingale Pro 6 > Cool Edit (Hard Limited / Normalized and fades) > CDWav (for track splitting) > Flac Frontend (FLAC)


    And, let me say, it sounds fucking awesome.
  6. Indeed Sergio. Check out the nice improv session of Eddie Vedder and Bono during Rockin in the Free World. At some point, Vedder comes up with the line "We love The Edge"
  7. Originally posted by cesar_garza01:Indeed Sergio. Check out the nice improv session of Eddie Vedder and Bono during Rockin in the Free World. At some point, Vedder comes up with the line "We love The Edge"

    Hahaha, yeah, just after Bono starts a new couple of verses by singing "I don't know how to end" [the song], Eddie answers "We love the Edge", and they all chant "We love the Edge, we love The Edge" until the end of the song. Brilliant
    I watched some bits of the concert earlier while I was posting the message above. I am not a big fan of this particular U2rulesmywolrd production but the show itself is fantastic, and partly re-watching it has gotten me pretty nostalgic of 2005 and my first concert!
  8. Originally posted by cesar_garza01:[..]

    I'm like you. You'll love (or maybe you do already) Vertigo Buenos Aires 2. They go crazy! I don't care that the songs were not performed flawlessly.
    The audience in Saitama is good too (not Latin America or Italian crazy levels). Check the "very good audience" of Saitama I. I prefer it over the matrix since it puts the audience in the front, without "clicks" and the count 1,2,3,4.

    +1
  9. Originally posted by cesar_garza01:Indeed Sergio. Check out the nice improv session of Eddie Vedder and Bono during Rockin in the Free World. At some point, Vedder comes up with the line "We love The Edge"

    awesome show and moment !
  10. 2005-10-17 Philadelphia

    Great boot with strong versions on post 2000 hits, maybe best Vertigo ever... Great audience too and good sound (i don't know why2 stars)
  11. Originally posted by fleavox:2005-10-17 Philadelphia

    Great boot with strong versions on post 2000 hits, maybe best Vertigo ever... Great audience too and good sound (i don't know why2 stars)

    I think you're right. That source has a rating of 4 stars now, which I think is adequate for its good quality.
    It's a great concert and the audience is very loud, in a good way, never interfering with the band. You should check it out!
  12. Originally posted by fleavox:2005-10-17 Philadelphia

    Great boot with strong versions on post 2000 hits, maybe best Vertigo ever... Great audience too and good sound (i don't know why2 stars)
    +1

    and this is were Bruce Springsteen played with the band

    but he is looking for a last leg show