T
twist
New member
It's taken a lot of experimentation, but I've always been convinced that it would work.
I record on an 8 track portastudio. Often times 8 tracks is barely enough ( I always try to avoid bouncing in order to have more control at mixdown). So I usually record 8 mono tracks. It sounds ok, but it's mono, and kinda uninteresting sometimes.
Anyway, last night, I tried mixing an acoustic guitar track dry, panned hard left. The same signal sent through the effects loop to a very short delay (5-10 ms.) and panned hard right. It was perfect. Sounded like stereo. I also used the same technique on the tambourine. Awesome! Then positioning the other instruments at various spots in the stereo field, I was able to get one of the nicest blends I have ever gotten. All the instruments were audible and distinct, but nothing stuck out inappropriately.
I've tried similar setups before, but was never satisfied. I think the key is a very short delay time. Too much delay, and you lose a lot of definition and it just sounds washed out.
Today I am a happy camper!
Twist
I record on an 8 track portastudio. Often times 8 tracks is barely enough ( I always try to avoid bouncing in order to have more control at mixdown). So I usually record 8 mono tracks. It sounds ok, but it's mono, and kinda uninteresting sometimes.
Anyway, last night, I tried mixing an acoustic guitar track dry, panned hard left. The same signal sent through the effects loop to a very short delay (5-10 ms.) and panned hard right. It was perfect. Sounded like stereo. I also used the same technique on the tambourine. Awesome! Then positioning the other instruments at various spots in the stereo field, I was able to get one of the nicest blends I have ever gotten. All the instruments were audible and distinct, but nothing stuck out inappropriately.
I've tried similar setups before, but was never satisfied. I think the key is a very short delay time. Too much delay, and you lose a lot of definition and it just sounds washed out.
Today I am a happy camper!
Twist