re: Question |
FLYER7747 wrote…
My question is this. If you don't pan your tracks does that mean its a mono recording? I didn't pan any of the 5 tracks of a recording. I was told its mono because it wasn't panned. According to my program it's a stereo recording...
itīs not a "real" mono-signal, but it sounds like a mono-signal.
A stereo-signal is generated by differences of loudness on both channels which enables the listener to localize an instrument in the stereo-field.
But if you donīt create these differences, on both cannels you just can hear the same signal so that it sounds like "all throught the middle". Mono. Better call it "fake mono", hehehe.
I assume that youīre recording with 2 mics. So, when you pan the git half to the left and the vox half to the right, you can achieve a decent stereoscopic mixing result. Play around a lil with ya tools. Take time and explore ya possibilities and options.
Hope it helps
U.L.I.
if you play back mono music through a regular two speaker stereo speaker configuration, is it suddenly stereo? No!
lol,fine.
Fake stereo, mr craig, is when you take a mono source and add reverb and/or other stereo trickery (panning certain frequencies to just one channel of the stereo mix) to make the audio sound like it's stereo
Fake stereo, mr craig, is when you take a mono source and add reverb and/or other stereo trickery (panning certain frequencies to just one channel of the stereo mix) to make the audio sound like it's stereo