Not a strange question - An EXCELLENT question that isn't asked nearly enough.
Too many recordings have (work with me here...) kind of a giant "kidney bean" shaped drum kit with a spattering of instruments inside of it. Many of the people who make these mixes wonder why their mixes sound very "two-dimensional" (for lack of a better term), lacking depth and space (except for the drum overheads).
Many times, it's really simple -- The best way to have "space" and "depth" in a recording is to use SPACE AND DEPTH WHILE RECORDING.
Each individual mic is picking up an individual signal -- When you're in a room, everything is a different distance from your ears. In a recording, the speakers are the only reproduction of that distance. Drums wind up sounding huge and "surrounding the space" because much of the time, those mics (the overheads specifically here) were the only things that weren't right up next to the source. If you record everything 6-12" from a mic, your mixes apparent depth will be 6-12" deep. People add reverb and early reflections to simulate distance and space - But what a mic hears at 12" is totally different than what it hears at 3 or 4 feet -- And there really isn't a simple way to create that distance after the fact.
Distance matters. Space matters. The room matters. How that room is captured matters.
NO DOUBT: A lot of recordists don't have a reasonable sounding space. Or they throw a bunch of foam up all over the walls and wonder why their recordings sound muddy and lifeless. Same thing (and other things, but for this, we'll stick with the subject at hand). And to that end, well, that's what happens. That's why the most important feature of pretty much any studio is the sound of the space(s).
Long story short (yeah, I know - I should've thought of that earlier), record things how you want to hear them. Go ahead and close-mic those guitars -- But don't forget putting a mic across the room too. Then pan accordingly. If you want the kit to sound towards the back, don't pan the overheads hard L/R. If you want the guitars to sound like they're on the outside of the kit, make sure the room mics ARE panned hard - but not necessarily the guitars. Record incidental percussives (think shakers, tambourines, rain sticks, etc.) from across the room - Heck, I mic the reflections off the wall with some percussives whether I'm panning them out or not. Distance makes a difference.