
bozmillar
New member
The problem does not seem to be in the audio file itself; give his sample a listen and test, it seems just fine to me in regards to the described problem.
G.
Oh sorry, I didn't see that he posted a link.
The problem does not seem to be in the audio file itself; give his sample a listen and test, it seems just fine to me in regards to the described problem.
G.
Check it out, boz. I gave it a listen in phones and monitors, in SoundForge as well as a consumer player (Winamp), and nothing sounds out of the ordinary stereo spread-wise or frequency balance-wise to me. But maybe you can spot something I missed. I also ran a phase analysis on it and that looks pretty normal, so I don't think it's a phasing issue.Oh sorry, I didn't see that he posted a link.
Check it out, boz. I gave it a listen in phones and monitors, in SoundForge as well as a consumer player (Winamp), and nothing sounds out of the ordinary stereo spread-wise or frequency balance-wise to me. But maybe you can spot something I missed. I also ran a phase analysis on it and that looks pretty normal, so I don't think it's a phasing issue.
All that said, though, I don't claim to know why Sonar would or should be causing such a symptom. The only thing that would even come close that I could think of would be the panning laws, but that doesn't seem to quite fit the description either.
G.
I have people complain about that once in a while. I'm not sure why that happens because every time I click on them they work. Try this: http://www.bozrecords.com/mp3s/demos.php
It's ugly, but should work.
Wow, I don't get that. The centered stuff - the drums and bass - would probably be showing something on the phase correlation meter if their image was being spread, but I'm getting a rock solid line right down the middle.yeah, i listened, and it sounds as wide as can be to me
Wow, I don't get that. The centered stuff - the drums and bass - would probably be showing something on the phase correlation meter if their image was being spread, but I'm getting a rock solid line right down the middle.
Yeah the guitars are hard panned to each side, in that sense the *mix* is wide, but as far as the focus of the individual tracks, when I pan the playback L/R balance. I get zero of the left guitar in the right channel, and vice versa, meaning that my playback has them rock solid hard-panned and un-spread.
G.
*Whew*, OK. I thought for a minute that I was going even crazier than normalsorry, I think my wording was bad. I meant that the individual tracks didn't sound spread and that each guitar was about as far out to the side as it could have been, more like the second picture in the original post.
All you're really doing there is making the guitar sound thicker and more dense. Yeah it can draw the listener's attention away from the center by thickening up the sound of the sides, but you gotta be careful not to over-do that. I could probably make a cottage industry out of the number of newbs that have contacted me with a mix they couldn't "get right" and the problem was that they simply had so much going on with hard-panned guitars that everything else in-between them receeded into the background no matter how hot they boosted it.I know you already probably know that trick. Just wet those distortion with short reverbs to smoothen it out, panned hard R and L, EQ a little bit, again whatevers on the center especially kick and snare, leave it as is maybe EQ a little with no compression. With those LR distortion on, those drums will get squeezed by those guitar and will sound more centered![]()
And that's because you're still working on getting the ears. I don't mean that in a mean fashion, j, just as constructive analysis. The underdeveloped critical skills led to an inaccurate description of the symptoms, which frankly led us on a bit of a wild goose chase looking for the solution.In short, its me that had the problem, not the faulty software. I still lack the skills in making music sound good.