M
Mike Freze
New member
I have a stupid question, but we're here to learn, right? It concerns mono recording vs. stereo recording for panning considerations.
I realize that almost all instruments you record are recorded as "mono" to the tracks inside your recording software (I have Cubase LE).
If I record, say, my guitar to a track and mess with the panning, I can pan that recording hard left. What happens is the sound from my right speaker gradually lessens (goes away) and the recording gets louder to the left speaker. I can even make it disappear altogether from one speaker and go to the other with full panning. This is true with what I record or even if I import a mastered song (say, one of The Beatles tunes). Same thing.
How do I get my guitar to pan far left in BOTH speakers (not just send the total sound to the other speaker?) Like, I want to pan the guitar track to 3 0'clock for both left and right speakers; or maybe I want the right speaker to pan that guitar to 3 0'clock but have it come out at 9 0'clock in the left.
Is this where stereo comes into play? How do you take a mono track you recorded to get that stereo split? Do you put it on two channels withing the same track after you recorded in mono or do you need to duplicate the mono track to a new blank track and pan them out separately?
Where do you configure the setup to do this? In your "output" section of your mixer, your "input" section, or somewhere else? Should your panning controls show you how to split the signal so it becomes two channels? Do you have to bounce your project to get it to do this? I'm using my virtual mixer, by the way. A bit confused on HOW to get that two channel record on one track. Or does it have to be done while recording? Not everyone uses two mics to record every track just to make it end up a stereo track.
Thanks.
Mike Freze
I realize that almost all instruments you record are recorded as "mono" to the tracks inside your recording software (I have Cubase LE).
If I record, say, my guitar to a track and mess with the panning, I can pan that recording hard left. What happens is the sound from my right speaker gradually lessens (goes away) and the recording gets louder to the left speaker. I can even make it disappear altogether from one speaker and go to the other with full panning. This is true with what I record or even if I import a mastered song (say, one of The Beatles tunes). Same thing.
How do I get my guitar to pan far left in BOTH speakers (not just send the total sound to the other speaker?) Like, I want to pan the guitar track to 3 0'clock for both left and right speakers; or maybe I want the right speaker to pan that guitar to 3 0'clock but have it come out at 9 0'clock in the left.
Is this where stereo comes into play? How do you take a mono track you recorded to get that stereo split? Do you put it on two channels withing the same track after you recorded in mono or do you need to duplicate the mono track to a new blank track and pan them out separately?
Where do you configure the setup to do this? In your "output" section of your mixer, your "input" section, or somewhere else? Should your panning controls show you how to split the signal so it becomes two channels? Do you have to bounce your project to get it to do this? I'm using my virtual mixer, by the way. A bit confused on HOW to get that two channel record on one track. Or does it have to be done while recording? Not everyone uses two mics to record every track just to make it end up a stereo track.
Thanks.
Mike Freze