Whilst waiting for tea to cook, I compared all of the samples to see what differences you'd made, and what (if anything) I'd change. And of course I'm listening in a different environment (even though I know quite a bit about yours!), so it's bound not to have quite the same tonal balance when I play them here.
But I think, on balance, that considering that this is a live performance, which is invariably a compromise, that I
slightly prefer the remixed version. Peter's comment about the resonance is interesting - and he's right, although I'd say that it
sounds like the violin rather than the room. And when you consider the overall impact of the sound (I'm talking mainly about the solo stuff here), I began to wonder... and so I removed 2.5dB at 3.8kHz with the parametric EQ, with a Q value of 0.3, and I think that if you did this first, and then applied the same amount of reverb, this resonance wouldn't be as noticeable. But we are talking
very fine tuning here...
But hey, I can't play with the reverb, so I've just EQ'd it. And on
this system, I prefer the sound with just that
little bit less mid-range energy. Yes, we are talking about a very small change - but for me it means that listening for a longer period is slightly easier. I tried it on the longer sample as well, and came to the same conclusion.
But this is still excellent,
especially for a first attempt.
I suppose a lot of my feeling is based on the fact that, while most of us are not professional engineers, through a lot of practice and struggle to understand audio processing, we can come up with some quite decent results.
Nowadays, there's less excuse than there has ever been - a
lot of this has been demystified, and there is very little reason why, as Cal says, anybody with a little bit of nous shouldn't be able to make
perfectly competent recordings - and hasn't Karl proved it!