The phase button isn't a magic button.
I was having a conversation with a friend-of-a-friend at a New Year's party who was supposedly very knowledgeable in all things recording having just complete his A-level music-tech course
. Anyway, I was telling him how I'd just been recording some guitars and layered each part several times which he seemed very confused about and asked why I didn't just duplicate the track, pan them hard L/R and delay one a bit. I told him that it didn't quite have the same effect as layering, and it thinned out horribly when you summed to mono. To this he replied... 'not if you press the special button in Cubase'. This was also the same guy who asked me why I varied my mic placement when recording guitars - "wouldn't it be better to record all the same then change the tone in post-production?"... *lol*
. And yet, after all this, he still thought he knew more than me
Annnyyyway, back on topic.
The phase button just inverts the phase. And example where to use this is when you double-mic a snare and the mic on the bottom of the snare will be out of phase with the one on top (to put things simply) because they are on either sides of the sound source facing each other. In this case, yes, you make sure that you invert the phase.
Another time you would use the button would be if you had a cable that had been wired wrong and so one of the channels of a stereo signal / double-mic / mic+DI recording had been inverted.
However, the phase issues encountered with things like drum overheads are caused by time differences...
If you have a snare drum with one mic next to it and one mic across the other side of the room, there will be a slight delay between the sound reaching the first mic and the second mic. Now think back to your drum overheads - if you have a spaced pair then sound (maybe of a snare hit) may arrive at one mic slightly before the other, which could cause some weird cancellation when they are summed (well, not if they were panned hard and not actually being summed, but it could still sound a bit odd).
You can't just delay tracks to make them 'line up'; you could line up some back overhead tracks to make all the snare hits in phase but it would push everything else out and probably make something else like cymbals or toms sound really weird. It would sound even more weird if you had some room ambiance in the recording which got messed around by delays.
So yes, get it right in tracking.
Enjoy
