S
Skyline609
New member
This is a great discussion, and i figure id put my 2 cents in. To reiterate what most have been saying here, stereo is just using 2 separate channels of sound info as well as two separate speakers. Just like how quadraphonic was 4 channels with 4 sets of sound info and 4 speakers back in the 70s when that was introduced.
monophonic- 1
stereophonic-2
quadraphonic-4
and now we have 5.1- 5 channels and the subwoofer!
im not sure if i got this right or not, but mono cant be panned. Im almost positive if you panned a track anywhere, and then made it mono, it would instantly go to one channel, which is illusioned as the middle because we are conditioned into listening in stereo; but you need to think of it as taking your two speakers and mushing them together to get 1 speaker. So if you took away the master buss on your mixer, and just pictured the mixer as all single tracks, the pan wouldnt effect the sound at all. (1 channel). Any panned "mono" track, is actually stereo, even if you recorded it with one mic, its still coming out in stereo (2 channels still, just the data for one channel is no sound)
So the way i look at it is this. The channels on a mixer arent really stereo or mono. They are just data carriers. Since most mixers will output in stereo, you get all these options of where you want to put the sound "data carriers". For example you can place a guitar on the right, but have its reverb effect on the left (stereo); or you can have a guitar track on the left, and a copied guitar track on the right (still stereo even though it will sound "mono"); or you can have all combinations of instruments in all parts of the sound field (stereo mix- combined individual stero signals to form a master stereo signal)
i am confusing myself jst thinking about it. but i think if we disassociate mono and stereo all together, it may be a bit easier to understand.
i might be wrong on some of this
i tried though/
monophonic- 1
stereophonic-2
quadraphonic-4
and now we have 5.1- 5 channels and the subwoofer!
im not sure if i got this right or not, but mono cant be panned. Im almost positive if you panned a track anywhere, and then made it mono, it would instantly go to one channel, which is illusioned as the middle because we are conditioned into listening in stereo; but you need to think of it as taking your two speakers and mushing them together to get 1 speaker. So if you took away the master buss on your mixer, and just pictured the mixer as all single tracks, the pan wouldnt effect the sound at all. (1 channel). Any panned "mono" track, is actually stereo, even if you recorded it with one mic, its still coming out in stereo (2 channels still, just the data for one channel is no sound)
So the way i look at it is this. The channels on a mixer arent really stereo or mono. They are just data carriers. Since most mixers will output in stereo, you get all these options of where you want to put the sound "data carriers". For example you can place a guitar on the right, but have its reverb effect on the left (stereo); or you can have a guitar track on the left, and a copied guitar track on the right (still stereo even though it will sound "mono"); or you can have all combinations of instruments in all parts of the sound field (stereo mix- combined individual stero signals to form a master stereo signal)
i am confusing myself jst thinking about it. but i think if we disassociate mono and stereo all together, it may be a bit easier to understand.
i might be wrong on some of this

i tried though/