[...]I figured this out when comparing to other, wet libraries. It's only my impression after many, many hours of testing. Don't take it too seriously:
- The setup in MIR Pro always resembles a combination of "spot/close" and "main" microphone in reality. You could go down to a "close" microphone on it's own though.
- The main microphone alone can't be compared to a "decca tree" in reality, only in combination with the secondary microphone.
- The main microphone brings the dry instrument into the room (i.e. the dry/wet ratio). This resembles a "mid" microphone in reality. Depending on the stereo image this could also yield into a "close" microphone, see point 1.
- The secondary microphone (which is only wet) gives additional depth and resembles, in combination with the main microphone, a "decca tree" to "ambient" sound.
1. True!
2. Not really, because the Secondary Mic is always "wet only", to avoid the otherwise inevitable phasing issues.
3. Partially true (see 2.), but you can indeed use MIR as an Ambisonics-based "spot mic" panning device without any room information added.
4. Mostly true, just without the "Decca" reference.
HTH,
Thanks, Dietz! Maybe it's depending on the library. Am I allowed to name it?
I mainly compare to MGM Sony, because the Synchron Stage is similar in size and, in my opinion, incredibly similar in sound, too. In this case a combination of main and secondary microphone indeed resembles the "room" microphone in this library. Maybe because it's a combination of decca and outriggers and some others, I'm not sure. So it's not a decca tree on it's own.
Of course, in MIR Pro it's not a "decca" tree, but I call it this way to have a comparison. And it comes really close to the sound.