@Nick Batzdorf said:
But a 4dB difference seems completely normal.
Over a long average rather not, but as long you can re-balance the power without affecting the integrity of the stereo field, it's no problem.
On the other subject single fader vs. stereo fader; it would be really a advantage to have a stereo sample player on two single fader, to have all possible control over the stereo field.
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Here a few words on stereo in general from my engineer:First, I try to think of the "Stereo Space" as a piece of musical reality. Once we have acquired that concept, we can conversely, also think of the "Stereo Space" as a piece of musical fantasy. Whether or not it could exist in nature, or in a natural acoustical environment, is irrelevant. Most of the "Stereo Spaces" in my recordings, began their life in my imagination...
I think of my stereo sound-field as a sonic sculpture...
I always try to make my stereo sound-field far more than merely two-channel mono. In other words, I always try to make my stereo sound-field multi-dimensional, not merely left, center and right. For me to be satisfied with a sound-field, it must have the proportions of left, center, right and depth.
Since the middle 1960’s I think my philosphical approach to using the "Stereo Space", has been to take the listener into a “New Reality” that did not, or could not, exist in a real life acoustical environment. This “New Reality”, of course, existed only in my own imagination. What I mean is, that before what I call “The Recording Revolution”, our efforts were directed towards presenting our recorded music to the listener in what amounted to an essentially unaltered, acoustical event. A little “Slice of Life”, musically speaking.(This “Recording Revolution” took place from 1950 through 1970) This was not true just of myself, but was also true of many of the people that were interested in the same things that I was. We all experienced this same “Recording Revolution”. After that change in our basic music recording objective, along came the “New Reality” in using the "Stereo Space".
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Understand first of all, that much of what I do in the studio is based on stereophonic microphone technique. True stereopohnic microphone technique. My favorite stereo mike technique is, of course, Blumlein Pair.
I’ve always felt that music mixing is, in reality, an extension of arranging. I think that gut reactions translated to music recordings are the most believable. Therefore, it follows that music mixing has to be entirely instinctive and intuitive. To be working on a piece of music, and then having to stop the creative flow, to think through a technical function, is absolutely impossible for me.
The comprehensive strength of a powerful automation system enhances my creative energy by providing new working options.
One of the features I always look for in any desk is if it has the capacity to free my creative process. I'm much more impressed by being able to put myself and my imagination into the music, than I am about any specific technical feature on the desk itself.
Beyond the technology and the studio environment, is the love of music itself that defines my approach to my projects. I think music is really the only true magic in life. If I can't put my imagination into the music and create a sound field that exists first in my mind, and is not necessarily pre-thought, I will most definitely have a difficult time with a project. If the technology gets in the way of my imagination, I get very quickly bored and I’ll frequently start yawning. For me, as you can see, reacting to the sound of the music is enormously important.
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We'll talk first about one of the most important aspects of musical sound. This one component of musical sound will lead us to a basic understanding of what happens when we record music.
That subject matter is Timbre...
By definition Timbre means; "The quality of a sound that distinguishes it from other sounds of the same pitch and volume." In other words, the distinctive tone of a musical instrument or voice.
To look at the timbre of a musical instrument scientifically we find that the timbre of a musical sound is a result of the complex combination of two entities:
#1- The fundamental note played by that instrument, or voice, together with its multi-directional overtones, and...
#2- The pattern of early room reflections resulting from that note and its overtones.
Think about that for a minute: it is all happening in the first few milliseconds in the life of a sound, before the onset of reverberation and it is very, very complex, far beyond the reach of any conventional math (although the new science of chaos is revealing there may be ways of dealing with such complexity).
If the microphones are too close to the sound source the early room reflections will be lost.
These early room reflections are an often neglected, but very important component of musical sound quality.
If the mics are placed too far from the sound source the later arriving reverberation will mask the actual sound source it self... (this explains why some seats in a concert hall are better than others).
Here's a good example; If I were looking for a very, 'breathy' or sensuous’, vocal recording 'sonic image', for instance, I would place the singer as close as is physically possible to a single microphone, thereby eliminating almost all early reflections. I would even use no windscreen, if possible.
In his book "Spatial Hearing" Blauert says our hearing system deals with the complexity of the human hearing process by employing something known as "spectral incoherence".
If you were to analyze a sound as it entered each ear canal you would find the expected differences in frequency and phase response between the two ears. But this really doesn't tell us all that much.
When we look at a sound as two separate sonic events,(time and frequency) you will see there are similarities as well as differences (i.e. 50% correlation) which allow the two ears to work together to form a spatial impression, not neccessarily directional because we are dealing with multiple events not just a single sound source.
This quality, or I really prefer to call it an ability in our hearing, I think plays a major role in what I like to call the "cocktail party effect". This means, that a person with two good ears can pick out one conversation from many, while a person with only one working ear cannot. Along that same line of thought, have you ever noticed how, when you monophonically record a person speaking in a reverberant room, (Like on a small mono cassette recorder) the recording sounds highly reverberant and essentially unintelligible. Yet when you are in that very same room with that person speaking, you can understand every word. This is, of course, our binaural hearing system in action. Our two good ears connected to our brain are able to separate the direct sound from the refelected sound and give us a highly intelligible sound image. A monophonic microphone and tape recorder cannot.
What I’m really talking about is that when we listen, we hear sounds with two ears, and thus utilize our binaural hearing. The sound waves reaching the two ears will usually not be identical. For low frequency sounds, of long wavelength(compared to the size of the head), there will generally be a phase difference due to the slightly different arrival times of the sounds at the two ears. For high frequency sounds, of short wavelength, there will also be an intensity difference due to the fact that one ear is farther from the source of the sound and is also in the sound 'shadow' of the head. However, despite these differences, we usually hear only one sound. This I call binaural 'fusion'. In the processing of these sounds, however, the brain utilizes these differences to enable to tell us what direction the sound is coming from. This process is called "Localization". "Localization" is, in reality, the basis for the stereophonic effect in music recording.
The real trick is to figure out how we can use all this esoteric and scientific knowledge and make it help us in recording music...
Stereo recording, as it exists today, can do a pretty good job of conveying spectral incoherence, or ‘Localization’ to a listener, if the recordist uses good microphone choice and placement. Such microphone choice and placement technique implies numerous conditions: (I'll give you a couple of the conditions that I think are the most important.)
The predicament with monophonic single microphone technique or placement is; (especially when it will be used as a single source point in a stereo mix) that we could say that since you only have one channel there is no incoherence, so you might as well get close and not risk the "off mic sound". That statement, of course, is gross generalization. It also runs the risk of seriously limiting our creativitly in certain recording situations.
There, that's a start........
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Question Angelo:so your blumlein track is on a stereo fader, and if
you wanna pan, you just turn the pan knob till the
source comes from where you wanna place it in the
stereo field ? Is there anything we have to consider
panning a blumlein stereo track, who could lead to
negative consequences with a blumlein stereo track?
Do you pan a blumlein stereo track at all, or is that
a fixed stereo field you never alter with panning, and
the horizontal only placement is done in another way,
i.e. at what angle the singer/instrumentalist stands to
the blumlein pair when recorded ?
Answer: Bruce SwedienNO!!! NEVER A STEREO FADER!!!!! THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A STEREO FADER!! So called stereo faders are always out of balance. Don't use them!!!! If one side of the microphone feeding a stereo fader is 1 db low it's image will always be off!!!
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