Frodo wrote:So, I guess my question is what would be the preferred reference track in terms of sound to work with? Do the digital and 5:1 versions get "closer", so to speak, to the right sound where the right sound may be very different then what I grew up hearing through the flaws of analog--- or does digital in some way "ruin" some aspects of the analog character of the sound?
I'm just trying to figure out how to continue laying a sonic groundwork. This is going to take more trial and error than I thought.
I have an opinion on this.
You will drive yourself mad trying to match any Beatles sounds exactly. Even the Fab Four VI project faced situations where they had something all set up on one day and recorded some samples, and then came back the next day to record more samples and found that things just didn't sound the same... so much so that they could not mix the samples within the VI instrument they were creating.
I often have trouble recreating the sounds I created myself, on a recording, even though I am in the same room with the same mics, guitars, and amp modelling, etc. Sonic signatures are difficult to reproduce... especially when you start going back and forth A/B comparing between them. You quickly start to lose perspective about which sound is better or worse or different or the same.
My advice, based on years of struggling to get sounds in the Beatle ballpark, is to spend less time listening to the actual sound on the recordings, and more time trying to match the way you think it ought to sound in your mind. You will end up with a new sound that has some similarity to what you were going for, but which has its own signature and it might even fit in better in with the song you are working on.
Many times, I have come up with a sound that I thought sounded like some Beatles guitar solo or other, and found that it was quite different when I compared it to the Beatles recording. Sometimes I like the quality of the newly created sound even better.
With regards to which versions of Beatles recordings you should use for reference, I think it depends on your setup. I would listen to a song or two in its vinyl version, a CD version, and anthology 5.1 mix through your main studio monitors. You should determine which version sounds best in your studio, and then match to those versions of the recordings. Any necessary adjustments can be done later with some EQ during mastering.
Just get it in the neighbourhood. Don't try to get it bang on or it will eat you up and make you miserable.
Those are my two cents and a nickle.
