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ThirdBird
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Dec 04, 2007
Posts: 36
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 9:23 am |
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To my understanding, 3 point mixing is where less important tracks are panned hard left or hard right, and more important ones are panned dead center.
Are there pros/cons or potential road hazards I should be aware of before I try to mix a song in this manner?
I tried googling, but I didn't really find anything.
Thanks for any help! |
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HemlokSociety
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: May 03, 2008
Posts: 11
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 12:36 pm |
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Well depending on how many instruments you are mixing together to 2 tracks, your not only going to pan hard left and right, you need to consider all pan positions. Take for example a drum kit, you could have anywhere from 1 to 20 microphones on that kit at 1 time, if you just panned every mic either hard left, right or center, you will get a very messy sound from that drum kit. Not to mention any other instruments in the mix. You want every instrument to have its own seperate space in the mix. So pan a guitar at 9 o'clock, bass usually always dead center along with vocals centered, drums pan to either drummer perspective or audience perspective....Either way dude you have a lot of work ahead of you, so get a mixing book to really get you started and read all of these posts on this forum!
Cheers,
Chris |
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AwedOne
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Aug 12, 2007
Posts: 250
Location: Columbus, OH
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 2:41 pm |
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ThirdBird wrote:
| Quote: | | ...less important tracks... |
What are those?
If a track has "less importance" it is unecessary, IMHO.
For a great example of placing instruments within the stereo image, listen to Stephen Curtis Chapman's "Dive". |
_________________ Bill Knipe
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Cubase 4 on PC, Tascam M-3500, FW-1082, Pearl drum kit, Sampson drum mics, Line 6 Pod 2.0, Roland Blues Cube, KRK ST6, AT 3035,3032 |
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ThirdBird
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Dec 04, 2007
Posts: 36
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 5:30 pm |
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| Quote: | | If a track has "less importance" it is unnecessary, IMHO. |
I didn't mean it like that.....
For instance, most likely you wouldn't want an auxiliary percussion track front and center, with the vocals on the side.
Like in "Yesterday" by the beatles.... guitar is one side, strings are the other, and vocals are in the middle.
| Quote: | | For a great example of placing instruments within the stereo image, |
Do you know of any popular, really well-known examples of this, that you really admire? |
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bent
Moderator

Joined: Oct 26, 2007
Posts: 1724
Location: Cocoa Beach, Fl
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 7:52 pm |
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The cover of "In My Life" that Ozzy did. |
_________________ -BeN(t)
*Proper gain structure makes the world go 'round!
All your base drumsticks are belong to us! - BobRogers |
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MarkG
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: May 29, 2007
Posts: 133
Location: way out in the sticks
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 8:05 pm |
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I would say shaker could be considered less important than the lead vocal.
Anyway, back to the issue. A lot of my mixes get stuck in the "Super Stereo" rut (I can't remember what the real term is , but its when you rely on recording everything in stereo or using stereo effects instead of panning creatively). I recently ran into a mix that sucked even more than usual, so I resorted to a real simple mix, using mono guitars panned hard left and right and it sounded better (at least the client liked it)
I would only suggest double checking the mix in mono often (for the sake of all those people still listening to music on AM radio) |
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bent
Moderator

Joined: Oct 26, 2007
Posts: 1724
Location: Cocoa Beach, Fl
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 8:07 pm |
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| Quote: | | I recently ran into a mix that sucked even more than usual, so I resorted to a real simple mix, using mono guitars panned hard left and right and it sounded better |
on mono (panned) guitars.
A mix that sucked more than usual.
I like it! |
_________________ -BeN(t)
*Proper gain structure makes the world go 'round!
All your base drumsticks are belong to us! - BobRogers |
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AwedOne
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Aug 12, 2007
Posts: 250
Location: Columbus, OH
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 8:14 pm |
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Yes. Steven Curtis Chapman.
In my genre (CCM), he is very well known, very popular, and I admire him both as an artist and a man; more than you can imagine.
| Quote: | For instance, most likely you wouldn't want an auxiliary percussion track front and center, with the vocals on the side.
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Why not? Because FM radio hits don't do it that way?
Nevertheless, that auxillary percussion track was important enough to record. Where I placed it in the L/R - Front/Back image would be an artistic decision, important only to me as the artist. If my artistic decisions pleased some listener, then all the better.
I submitted a song to a songwriters forum once. I was told the rules of songwriting said that I couldn't ryhme 2 lines in a row during a verse, and that I had to get to the chorus within 30 seconds or no one would listen. I immediately thought of at least 3 songs in the forum's genre that broke the first of those rules, and were mega-hits.
Up until recently, I tried to follow all the "rules", you know, the ones you learn by listening to radio hits. I would pick a "commercial" hit that was arranged kinda like the song I was mixing, and go, "Ok, so where is the acoustic guitar panned, the organ, EP, the crunch guitar, the texture guitar? When do they fade in and out? what's predominate in the verse, pre-chorus, chorus?
What I ended up with was songs that sorta sounded like my favorite hits, but were lacking something...oh, yeah, ORIGINALITY.
Lately, I've been trying to seek out and listen to lesser know artists who don;t follow the rules and end up making very creative artistic statements.
Of course, if what you're doing is mixing for clients, then it doesn't matter a hoot what your artistic bents are. You're a technician whose job is to translate and commit what the producer hears in his head, to CD.
Of course, if he doesn't havea clue where things should be panned, then you're back to being an artist, sort of. |
_________________ Bill Knipe
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Cubase 4 on PC, Tascam M-3500, FW-1082, Pearl drum kit, Sampson drum mics, Line 6 Pod 2.0, Roland Blues Cube, KRK ST6, AT 3035,3032 |
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AwedOne
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Aug 12, 2007
Posts: 250
Location: Columbus, OH
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 8:24 pm |
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Wow. I was gonna post a youT*be link to "Dive", but I listened to it first and YUK! There is absolutely no stereo separation at all. Everything is lined up right down the middle. Nothing at all like on the CD.
mp3 sucks! |
_________________ Bill Knipe
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Cubase 4 on PC, Tascam M-3500, FW-1082, Pearl drum kit, Sampson drum mics, Line 6 Pod 2.0, Roland Blues Cube, KRK ST6, AT 3035,3032 |
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bent
Moderator

Joined: Oct 26, 2007
Posts: 1724
Location: Cocoa Beach, Fl
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 8:28 pm |
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Yes, I think most if not all videos on youtube are mono - though I could be wrong.
I remember Remy a while back taking the site to task over that... |
_________________ -BeN(t)
*Proper gain structure makes the world go 'round!
All your base drumsticks are belong to us! - BobRogers |
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Codemonkey
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Dec 11, 2007
Posts: 895
Location: Scotland, UK
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Posted:
Mon Jun 02, 2008 9:05 pm |
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Youtube is mono. I love how the Recorderman Stereo OH drum technique videos are shown in mono as well. Really good way of demonstrating it's awesomeness.
"mp3 sucks!" What else is new?
I can hear the difference between mp3 and wav with HD280s plugged into cheap computer speakers.
Mp3 is for people who's output chain contains zero pro equipment. |
_________________ Curious button pushing Church sound guy.
In Soviet Russia, Phase Cancels You!
As Celine Dion's heart will go on, MadMax will go on about Rod's sticky and bent will go on about gain structure. |
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ThirdBird
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Dec 04, 2007
Posts: 36
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Posted:
Tue Jun 03, 2008 9:02 am |
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| Quote: | Wow. I was gonna post a youT*be link to "Dive", but I listened to it first and YUK! There is absolutely no stereo separation at all. Everything is lined up right down the middle. Nothing at all like on the CD.
mp3 sucks! |
As soon as I saw your post, I tried to youtube it. I think it's really cool that so much stuff is on youtube, but it would be nice if the sound quality was better.
| Quote: | | you have a lot of work ahead of you, so get a mixing book to really get you started |
I have one on order from the library.... I believe it's The musician's guide to home recording. |
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HemlokSociety
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: May 03, 2008
Posts: 11
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Posted:
Tue Jun 03, 2008 5:33 pm |
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I have that book, its not that great really, I also have Mixing Engineer's Handbook which is what you probably should get, very informative and descriptive and has different opinions from well known mixers. |
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ThirdBird
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Dec 04, 2007
Posts: 36
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Posted:
Tue Jun 03, 2008 6:56 pm |
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| Quote: | | different opinions from well known mixers. |
You mean mixers as in people who mix or as in a lifeless piece of equipment? |
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BobRogers
Recording Org Pro Audio Group

Joined: Apr 04, 2006
Posts: 1147
Location: Blacksburg, VA
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Posted:
Tue Jun 03, 2008 7:25 pm |
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I guess the point has already been made that this method of mixing is not exactly "standard." I'll add another second hand, poorly remembered quote from some big name in some small article (Sorry, we have visitors in town this week and my sister and brother-in-law just took my nephews and niece off. I'm trying to decide how big a hangover I can manage tomorrow) - aaaaanyway, his advice was "there are three places that you should never pan unless you have a really good reason - dead center, full left, and full right." I kind of like the advice as long as you remember that there are a lot of good reasons to pan to those places. I like to create a fairly natural sound stage panning the tracks the way I'd place members of a live band. There are lots of other ways to go especially when we are talking about stereo mics or double tracked guitars. I'm pretty skeptical about the approach you are talking about, but by all means try it. The only thing you can make is your time.
| ThirdBird wrote: | | ...Like in "Yesterday" by the beatles.... guitar is one side, strings are the other, and vocals are in the middle... |
It's pretty well documented that the focus at EMI at that time was on mono mixing. Stereo was considered a fad from the US - only worth a quick and dirty mix. The stereo mixes on US albums like "Yesterday and Today" were horrible. Some as bad as vocals on one channel, instruments on the other. Of course it wouldn't be the first time that an afterthought became a standard, but to someone over 50 the idea of trying to emulate the stereo mixes of these songs is really strange. |
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