F
FIRESOLE
New member
The trick is to never let the guitar player have the "guitar" faders.
LMFAO...you are so fugging right! (and I'm a guitar player).
LMFAO...you are so fugging right! (and I'm a guitar player).
goldfish said:Well, in CEP there is a thing in Pan/Expand in Amplification which "increaces the width", and there is a preset called "Mastering Width" which makes it about 45% wider. Not sure about such a thing in pro-tools
However, I have absolutley no idea what it actually does, but it sounds fairly good to meIts one of thems "magic buttons"
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Cloneboy Studio said:Most "stereo enhancers" function by adjusting the phase of the left vs. right and right vs. left image. In other words, you are screwing up your phase relationships.
IMHO stereo width enhancers sound almost as bad on a mixdown as a BBE Sonic Maximizer or other aural enhancer.
Tools like these have their place for audio reconstruction, but never should be used as a "magic button" because it just doesn't work that way (did you really think it was that easy?). In fact, instead of magic button they should be called "newbie buttons" because overuse of that stuff screams novice engineer.
The only time I've ever used anything like a stereo enhancer was on individual tracks like overheads that were placed to centrally to capture a good image of a drum kit. And the only time I had to use that were on other people's recordings I had to re-mix for them. Once again--correcting an error.
rokcid said:try panning the overheads 100 l/r
guitars 100R and about 85-90 left....offset them about 1-2 mil secs
pan the kit from the drummers point of view....
snare 10-15L
Kick C
HighHat I usually pan them 100 L and use bleed from the overheads to fill
PLEASE TELL ME WHY MIX FROM THE DRUMMERS POV? Ive always mixed drums from an audience perspective, ususally Hi-hts 60/70 R with the snare 40/ 50 R. PS dont get bogged down in stereophonics - THERE is always a need to check mono compatability - for AM radio for example.
Cloneboy Studio said:Most "stereo enhancers" function by adjusting the phase of the left vs. right and right vs. left image. In other words, you are screwing up your phase relationships.
IMHO stereo width enhancers sound almost as bad on a mixdown as a BBE Sonic Maximizer or other aural enhancer.
Tools like these have their place for audio reconstruction, but never should be used as a "magic button" because it just doesn't work that way (did you really think it was that easy?). In fact, instead of magic button they should be called "newbie buttons" because overuse of that stuff screams novice engineer.
The only time I've ever used anything like a stereo enhancer was on individual tracks like overheads that were placed to centrally to capture a good image of a drum kit. And the only time I had to use that were on other people's recordings I had to re-mix for them. Once again--correcting an error.