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hey guys. I have a problem the recent song we're working on. I don't know where to put the instruments. I have the following tracks, all in mono:

kick
snare
drum overheads (only had access to one cardioid mic)
lead guitar
bass guitar
vocals
synth pad

How can I make this stereo?
I have a lot of stereo reverb, and backup vocals panned left and right, but don't know what else to do... it doesn't really need a second guitar part so i can't really use that to pan that left and right. I was thinking of adding shakers but I really don't know what else can be done.

Any suggestions would be great...

Comments

Kapt.Krunch Tue, 03/11/2008 - 05:35

I'm trying to imagine that.....

Kick, snare and ONE overhead...not gonna get a lot of movement from those, unless you figure out how to get some space around that overhead, huh?

Bass guitar...also down the middle.

Lead vocal down the middle, backups panned?

So far the panned backups are the only stereo elements...

May double the synth pad and play with slight delays, and possibly even do the same with the guitar. Maybe the pan the synth pads far l and r, and the guitar a bit less?

I guess you could pan the snare just slightly one way, and the overhead slightly the other, with the kick down the middle to see what happens.

What's the drum kit look like?

Kapt.Krunch

Cucco Tue, 03/11/2008 - 11:05

Other than the standard panning (which would leave you with a primarily mono signal - which, BTW, is quite common - moreso than you'd think), here are a few tricks I've done to "enhance" the stereo imaging of tracks.

Single overhead -
Put a reverb on with a HPF so that it primarily catches the cymbals.

With this extra signal you can either LPF the original (on a seperate track) and use the reverb track as your cymbals (which will sound quite wide - nice for an effect - annoying for an entire album). Or you can simply blend it lightly back in with your main overhead track. I would stick with a short early-reflection time -

For guitars -
copy and paste - pull one of the guitars ahead between 5 and 10ms and the other back an equal amount. Pan left and right to taste (again equal but opposite amounts). This won't make the guitars sound very wide, but it will help to leave a slight hole in the middle for your vocalist who may be struggling to get over a hole drumkit, guitar and synth.

Any chance the Synth was recorded in stereo??

fourone3 Tue, 03/11/2008 - 11:56

This is more of a question than a suggestion:

Could he pan the guitar slightly, put up a reverb aux and pan it an equal amount in the opposite direction? Or perhaps to the snare instead?

Then pan the synth in the opposite direction of the guitar just slightly?

When you copy and paste, then delay the pasted track, are there any consequences when collapsing back to mono? Instead of delaying the track, what about putting a chorus on one, to give it a different type of separation?

Again, just throwing things on the wall to see what sticks, and to satisfy my curiosity :)

Cucco Tue, 03/11/2008 - 12:04

fourone3 wrote: This is more of a question than a suggestion:

Could he pan the guitar slightly, put up a reverb aux and pan it an equal amount in the opposite direction? Or perhaps to the snare instead?

Sure. The primary energy will still be on the side in which you panned the original guitar part, but it would give you some extra width. I wouldn't go too wide. Also - reverb on the snare...it will sound a little 80's ish...Def Leppard??

fourone3 wrote:
Then pan the synth in the opposite direction of the guitar just slightly?

Sure. This could help spread the energy a little. Again - great for effect, annoying over an entire album.

fourone3 wrote:
When you copy and paste, then delay the pasted track, are there any consequences when collapsing back to mono?

Yes. If done improperly (too wide of a spread for example) you could have some pretty bad phase cancellation. Additionally, it could make the voice struggle when collapsed to mono. These are things that can easily be worked out while mixing by trying it in mono then switching back and forth while making minute adjustments.

fourone3 wrote:
Instead of delaying the track, what about putting a chorus on one, to give it a different type of separation?

Sure. It's been done a million times. You won't get that much of a stereo spread though without some kind of delay.

fourone3 wrote:
Again, just throwing things on the wall to see what sticks...:)

Was that you that did that with the booger in the restroom at the Outback Steakhouse? That was gross!

anonymous Tue, 03/11/2008 - 13:38

8-)

wow. so many great suggestions. Thank you all.

The Reverb with HPF on the overheads is brilliant.

I wanted to try the whole effects on left and guitar on right deal before. kinda like van halen used to do with delay...

I was also thinking about creating a second synth pad (the one we have now is more of an effect thing) and pan them both wide.

One problem with having the backup vocalists left and right and the main vox center is that the backup vocals stand out more than the main vocals because the musical space is wide open to the left and right.

if you want to hear what I'm working with... here's the track with minimal compression, eq, and leveling, and only two vocal verses finished. kick and snare are too loud as well.

http://

track called pills.

P.S. The vocals stink.

BrianaW Tue, 03/11/2008 - 16:28

I use this sometimes, it might work for the overhead.

http://free-plugin-list.com/plugin.php?id=147

"This VST plugin uses a six bands filter to spread a mono signal to "fake" stereo signal, it has panning+LFO on every band so you can make dynamic effects, you can make slow and subtle changes as well as making extreme panning modulation, it works great on drumloops and strings and it works specially nice on synths."

Another idea would be to either copy a track or use a send and put a 100% wet room reverb on it with a really short attack and decay, so it sounds like it's just across the room a little. Then mix it low, and pan it to the right and pan the dry track slightly left (or pan to taste).

Blueline chorus mixed lightly under the lead vocal might make it sound more lush too. All of the great suggestions in this thread should give you everything you need. Oh, and the vocal sound great to me bro. :)

anonymous Tue, 03/11/2008 - 22:00

Thanks.

I tried using waves s1 stereo imaging vst at university studio and it sounded like it just added ambiance and when used waves stereo analyzer it didn't change the image width...

I'm stuck. If you want here what I'm talking about... listen to imagine by john lennon (when his vocal comes in the piano shifts wide.) How do they do that?

Also if anybody could tell me how "I'm Ready, I Am" by The Format accomplishes the wide stereo guitar in the intro that'd be really really great!! It's driving me crazy...

here is a playlist with both songs so you can hear what I'm talking about, along with another song that I just really like the mix.

http://www.playlist.com/node/28256715

anonymous Wed, 03/12/2008 - 02:13

I've never really noticed that with "Imagine" untill now but I don't see why you would want to replicate it?

It sounds terrible to tell you the truth!

My guess is that they simply panned most of the piano to the right as soon as the vocals started to make space for the bass on the left due to limitations and recording techniques of the time. Most of the Beatles tracks were done this way.

I don't really have any tips on stereo imaging as I don't have enough experience.

What I would say is for the drums you could have panned them the way the actual drum kit was possitioned, i.e.

Kick - Centre
Snare - Left or Right on the Kit
Hi Hats - Left or Right on the Kit
Tom/s - Left or Right on the Kit

Then you could have played about with the Overheads to create a wider sound but your kind off limited with what you have already.

I think the best bet is to play about with it and go with what sounds most natural to you.

Listening to your track I would say the guitar part sounds ok how it is, to me it's the drums that need a bit of work. They are very faint compared to the other parts, especially the kick. The snare also sounds like a tin can.

hope this helps;)