I think to my ears having that mic pointed into the booth sounded better. It didn’t sound as muddy as it did from inside, and I actually think it helped reject more noise. Interesting, it’s something you hear a lot of sound techs preach about containing noise from in front of the mic. But a lot of “portable vocal booths” were still made to catch noise from behind the mic, and from what I could hear, the experts are very much correct. I imagine with good floor absorption and some bass traps in the room, this could make for a nice unconventional vocal booth in any studio.
Great video production James! My home "built-in" vocal booth has the same configuration. The showcase of the sound deadening quality you displayed with this portable unit is impressive. Controlling the environment is so darn important for predictable recording session results
I have to agree with @beauobrien 1951. The mic pointed into the booth sounded so much better! WOW! I wonder if combining something like an Aston Halo behind the mic that is pointed into the PVB would sound even better!
Hi James. Hope you’re doing well. I saw this product 2 weeks ago and instantly felt a connection with it. Tonight I see your video :-) a question: I’m an opera singer recording at home in a not so amazing living room. I struggle with the reflections. Would you think that for my kind of music which is of course classical this product would be an absolutely must have! I can’t treat my living room because of one large window on one side and the walls around that have living room stuff on it. The room is very acoustic :-) I’ve build something myself using some blankets but when I sing a little more powerful especially the higher notes there is a distortion or ringing frequencies in the recording. Also it’s like the voice sounds diminished on the high notes probably because the sound is projected into the room and comes back into the mic. I think the blankets are not really doing anything. It drives me crazy and hope this product may help to get finally good sounding classics operatic vocals as far as that is possible of course. Also, the booth does look nice compared to the big pvc booth I build myself :-) hope to hear from you
@@KeenApollo I just ordered the isovox but I agree with you. Seems to still be pretty new to the market. Although Im not sure this would combat the soundproofing part so many people face when recording in smalll shared spaces. But aside from that this is the winner by default lol
@@officialchannel1292they did a video of them inside a church and it still sounded great ill have mine soon I'll check back in and let you know the results
I see this pvb as the only option in my room, the height is only 198cm vom bottom to the ceiling, everything I could build for my self wouldn't fit no Mather how I plan or how I would want to work arround... The main thing I'm asking myself is what are the 3 layers of acoustic material that they used to build the pvb. I must know how deep it goes cuz the most problems in my room I got arround 160hz
Y'all never take into account how it will sound after you apply effects etc. Untrained ears no doubt. Once you compress and add eq to a open room vocal you'll hear all the noise etc. This booth will give you great control over your vocal come mix Time.
Take in account that he never recorded it and play it back. You only hearing it has he sing. I guarantee if he recoded all 4 take and play them back you will hear the room noises in the other that was facing away from the booth
Trust me you want some air, I have the isovox and have tried it for a year and the boom and boxiness can not be eq’d away… recording in my untreated room has been easier than in the isovox! Using gating, noise reduction plug in and a transient shaper would be better than the isovox…thinking of trying 2 flexibooths 1 in front and 1 behind… an option cheaper than the isovox and this product here but less likely to produced under blanket muffed boxy sounds…
Foolish product, since people have no creativity to a true vocal booth, that you use even in the kitchen. Thus only caters reverberation but that only part of the story. These could have been done like puzzles you put together so each pie e is small. This is too big and just like, they said let's something bigger than isovox. Can't think of an original idea. Shhhhhzzzzz
I think to my ears having that mic pointed into the booth sounded better. It didn’t sound as muddy as it did from inside, and I actually think it helped reject more noise. Interesting, it’s something you hear a lot of sound techs preach about containing noise from in front of the mic. But a lot of “portable vocal booths” were still made to catch noise from behind the mic, and from what I could hear, the experts are very much correct. I imagine with good floor absorption and some bass traps in the room, this could make for a nice unconventional vocal booth in any studio.
I agree, it almost focused the sound towards the microphone while allowing it to breath.
Great video production James! My home "built-in" vocal booth has the same configuration. The showcase of the sound deadening quality you displayed
with this portable unit is impressive. Controlling the environment is so darn important for predictable recording session results
Love this product, would solve a lot of my problems. I hope they distribute to South Africa 🤞🏾
hi , Peter Tuerk here and yes we will have a sample and stock here at Tuerk Technologies or Turnkey
@@petertuerk9355 Awesome news, when?
I have to agree with @beauobrien 1951. The mic pointed into the booth sounded so much better! WOW! I wonder if combining something like an Aston Halo behind the mic that is pointed into the PVB would sound even better!
What is the price of this booth the website just shows pictures
Hi James. Hope you’re doing well. I saw this product 2 weeks ago and instantly felt a connection with it. Tonight I see your video :-) a question: I’m an opera singer recording at home in a not so amazing living room. I struggle with the reflections. Would you think that for my kind of music which is of course classical this product would be an absolutely must have! I can’t treat my living room because of one large window on one side and the walls around that have living room stuff on it. The room is very acoustic :-) I’ve build something myself using some blankets but when I sing a little more powerful especially the higher notes there is a distortion or ringing frequencies in the recording. Also it’s like the voice sounds diminished on the high notes probably because the sound is projected into the room and comes back into the mic. I think the blankets are not really doing anything. It drives me crazy and hope this product may help to get finally good sounding classics operatic vocals as far as that is possible of course. Also, the booth does look nice compared to the big pvc booth I build myself :-) hope to hear from you
If he not answering ur question that means a lot. Is not guarantee that will work for ur needs. Don’t trust on Peter words 😂😂
Nice voice. Great demo too.
So would you take this are the isovox? In you opinion which one sounds the best to you?
This definitely sounds better than the isovox I have the isovox but I'm going to retire that for this.
@@KeenApollo I just ordered the isovox but I agree with you. Seems to still be pretty new to the market. Although Im not sure this would combat the soundproofing part so many people face when recording in smalll shared spaces. But aside from that this is the winner by default lol
@@officialchannel1292they did a video of them inside a church and it still sounded great ill have mine soon I'll check back in and let you know the results
I see this pvb as the only option in my room, the height is only 198cm vom bottom to the ceiling, everything I could build for my self wouldn't fit no Mather how I plan or how I would want to work arround... The main thing I'm asking myself is what are the 3 layers of acoustic material that they used to build the pvb. I must know how deep it goes cuz the most problems in my room I got arround 160hz
Funny! I actually think the audio when the mic was OUTSIDE the booth sounded better. There was more timbre and sparkle to the vocals. 🤷🏾♀️
Y'all never take into account how it will sound after you apply effects etc. Untrained ears no doubt. Once you compress and add eq to a open room vocal you'll hear all the noise etc. This booth will give you great control over your vocal come mix Time.
Take in account that he never recorded it and play it back. You only hearing it has he sing. I guarantee if he recoded all 4 take and play them back you will hear the room noises in the other that was facing away from the booth
Were u buy this ...in india how much price is this can u send me link
how much does it cost
about $1995 as of February 5th 2023 and backordered
Do you have this booth???
@@beats-by-skrill8925 nope
Man handling is correct
👍👍👍
I can’t believe the back isn’t closed 🤷🏼♂️ That makes it useless for pro voiceover. Rather have the Isovox2 if you are on a budget.
Trust me you want some air, I have the isovox and have tried it for a year and the boom and boxiness can not be eq’d away… recording in my untreated room has been easier than in the isovox!
Using gating, noise reduction plug in and a transient shaper would be better than the isovox…thinking of trying 2 flexibooths 1 in front and 1 behind… an option cheaper than the isovox and this product here but less likely to produced under blanket muffed boxy sounds…
Foolish product, since people have no creativity to a true vocal booth, that you use even in the kitchen. Thus only caters reverberation but that only part of the story.
These could have been done like puzzles you put together so each pie e is small.
This is too big and just like, they said let's something bigger than isovox.
Can't think of an original idea. Shhhhhzzzzz
&oe much is ot
That booth gets a thumbs down
Man handling ... Politically incorrect
Preson handling ... Politically correct
Handling ... Correct
It can only be politically correct if it is typed or pronounced corrextly.
Such small will sound dull.