P
philips
New member
I've always recorded my live vocal/acoustic guitar music in stereo, using 2 mics. I've always "assumed" stereo was better, because that seems to be what almost everyone believes..........the theory being we've got 2 ears so we hear in stereo, therefore if we want to make an acoustically "accurate" recording of acoustic music (meaning vocal/guitar) it's best to record in stereo.
Well, a few days ago I started to think a bit about this "we hear in stereo" theory, and now I don't think we "really" hear in stereo, certainly not the type of full blown stereo people use in recordings. If someone sits in front of you and sings and plays an instrument I now believe we hear the music in "mono", because our ears are so close to each other they are hearing the music from "almost" the identical location. That's pretty much "mono". Also, the music being played/sung is also coming from virtually "one" location......that's mono. (Keep in mind I'm not talking about music where some musicians are at one side of a stage, some in the middle, and others on the other side of the stage during a performance). I'm basically talking about a sound source from a single general location, or close to that.
So I then decided to put the theory into action and recorded two live versions of the same tune, one stereo (2 mics with each mic recording both vocal and guitar) and one mono (using just one mic).
To my ears the mono version sounds MUCH more acoustically "accurate", meaning it sounds MUCH more like the music "really" sounds like when it is actually being played.........more natural.
I'm considering dropping stereo recording altogether.
Does anybody else have any thoughts regarding "acoustic accuracy" in recordings, in relation to stereo vs mono?
PS: Oops!! I just realized I should maybe have put this in the "recording techniques" section.
Well, a few days ago I started to think a bit about this "we hear in stereo" theory, and now I don't think we "really" hear in stereo, certainly not the type of full blown stereo people use in recordings. If someone sits in front of you and sings and plays an instrument I now believe we hear the music in "mono", because our ears are so close to each other they are hearing the music from "almost" the identical location. That's pretty much "mono". Also, the music being played/sung is also coming from virtually "one" location......that's mono. (Keep in mind I'm not talking about music where some musicians are at one side of a stage, some in the middle, and others on the other side of the stage during a performance). I'm basically talking about a sound source from a single general location, or close to that.
So I then decided to put the theory into action and recorded two live versions of the same tune, one stereo (2 mics with each mic recording both vocal and guitar) and one mono (using just one mic).
To my ears the mono version sounds MUCH more acoustically "accurate", meaning it sounds MUCH more like the music "really" sounds like when it is actually being played.........more natural.
I'm considering dropping stereo recording altogether.
Does anybody else have any thoughts regarding "acoustic accuracy" in recordings, in relation to stereo vs mono?
PS: Oops!! I just realized I should maybe have put this in the "recording techniques" section.
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