Front-to-back imaging
Front-to-back imaging - The placement of vocal or musical information ahead of (closer to) or behind (farther from) center position, front-to-back.
Front-to-back imaging - The placement of vocal or musical information ahead of (closer to) or behind (farther from) center position, front-to-back.
Hi dear recording community,
i'm new, and i'm from abroad so please forgive my english.
right to the problem:
It's been a unusually diverse month. In the past few weeks I've provided PA for a good up-and-coming Christian pop/rock band from down NC way, a rapper, a motivational speaker, and a classic rock band. In addition to remote recordings for a blues/rock band, we had another first of recording Broadway style vocal numbers (solos and duets) with piano accompaniment.
Hello everybody!
I proudly present the first plugin that tells you where to put the mics!
Its a little application that I wrote in Flash. It calculates with the "stereo recording angle" (SRA). You can use it to find the right arrangement for your mics at a stereo recording. Its also nice just for understanding how stereo imaging works... Just check it out!
I was just playing around with a stereo imaging tool when I came upon something I don't really understand. When an instrument is dead center, presumably (Correct me if I'm wrong at any point), it sounds dead center because it is playing equal volumes out of each speaker, making the brain perceive it as center.
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
Hi. I've been working for a while with an AMS Logic board. It has a great feature on the main bus. It has a STEREO-WIDE setting which "opens or closes" the stereo field. How can I achieve this in a Pro Tools system with an analog board? Does anyone know the process involved in this? I've seen this in mastering studios as well.
Thanks
i want to know if its necessary when panning to keep intruments away from voices in the stereo field? like if i pan voices like 9 o'clock an intruments fa left far right or visa versa
I have an old X/Y recording where an acoustic bassist in a folk group was on the right of a trio. Anyone have any ideas if I can center the bass - most of the power is in the R channel
Situation: Having all the tracks mixed, i made some "preview" files, trying to figure it out if there's any problems with panning, mono listening, and i really don't know which way is better to mix. There's always "something" happening about the imaging.