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I am currently mastering a duo -acoustic guitar and violin- of modern argentine music. The mix sounds great, but I need to slightly narrow the stereo image as the instruments are spread too much apart (left-right). Hopefully adding some reverb is part of the mastering process (the mix is almost dry) and could be used as an ingredient in my quest.

So far I have tried the standard stereo width tool in Sequoia, as well as the stereo multiband enhancer. Also, I have used the Lexicon 960 to push the image back in the stereo field. The end results are OK, but not great. I was wondering if some of you guys could give a hand on this?

Best,
Thomas

Comments

anonymous Sat, 07/15/2006 - 08:50

Thanks for your reply.
I should have been more specific. By phasing I meant 'subtle phasing'. Of course the mix I am working on is mono compatible = it does not fall apart when you hear it in mono. However, any acoustic recording set to mono introduces 'subtle phasing' by construction, as these recordings are done mainly using stereo pairs techniques (ORTF, AB, ...). This does not apply to other types of music where the left-right imaging is done using the panpot (level) during the mixing stage. I hope I have explained it better now.

Best,
Thomas

FifthCircle Sat, 07/15/2006 - 09:58

You may find that trying some Mid-Side processing might help... Bring the Sides down a couple dB from the middle.

If you don't know how to do this in Sequoia (as I know you use it), copy the stereo files to a second track. Right click on the pan knob and in the menu, select the options for "create Middle from stereo" and "create sides from stereo." What it basically does is reduce the level 6.02dB for summing and then one width is set to mono and the other is set to 200 (fully expanded). The two signals will make your stereo that you had before. At that point, you can raise and lower one or the other to adjust image width.

--Ben

anonymous Sun, 07/16/2006 - 02:56

Use a pair of bandpass filters to obtain band-limited versions of L and R. A good place to start your listening would be 300 Hz to 3,000 Hz, with 3rd-order slopes.

Now, crossfeed each of these signals into the opposite channel at, say, -6 dB or -3 dB. Adjust the filter corners and crossfeed gain to pull in the stage the desired amount.

Then, run the results into a stereo EQ to restore the overall tonal balance.

Hope this helps.

JoeH Sun, 07/16/2006 - 20:07

What Ben said is probably the best thing for what you need, but I'd suggest one other little trick, if you haven't thought of it yet:

In the mixer section (both Samplitude and Sequoia), select the "Stereo Enhancer" button, reverse click on it and open the dialog box. Select one of the presets, specifically: Below 250 mono (or below 500 mono). You can sum one of three selectable bands to mono- individually or separately to shrink or expand your stereo image to taste.

I like to sum most stuff below 100 to 150 hz anyway. You may want to try moving the low freq point up a bit to see if it helps any. (Perhaps up to 250-400 HZ). You'll get a thicker low and midrange, but keep the higher freqs for localization in the soundfield. Not something you want to overdo, but it might just help what you're trying to fix.

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