A
avatuar9
New member
I've been playing around with digital recording for about 3 years. Now that I am taking it more seriously, I've been doing alot of reading and getting as much info as I can about making really good recordings.
Something I don't understand is why my vocals sound like home recordings. While listening to some commercial pop recordings today, I've noticed that the vocals on those recordings sound more natural, as if the singer was singing about 3 feet away. It's as if they were placed much further away in the sound field. They also sound more centered and more isolated.
My recordings don't sound like that at all. My vocal recordings sound like they are much much closer and are spreadout across the sound field. They don't have that commercial quality to them. Even my friends demo sounds like commercial quality sound. I don't understand what I'm missing here. I'm placing my vocals about 6 to 8 inches away from the mic like many books suggest so as not to pickup noise floor and room reflections. I'm also rolling of the lower frequencies as to make up for the proximity effect. I'm also recording the vocals in mono, like they should be for most pop recordings.
How do you move a vocal back in the sound field if your vocal is in mono. What am I doing wrong? If anybody with more experience knows what I'm talking about, please help me.
Something I don't understand is why my vocals sound like home recordings. While listening to some commercial pop recordings today, I've noticed that the vocals on those recordings sound more natural, as if the singer was singing about 3 feet away. It's as if they were placed much further away in the sound field. They also sound more centered and more isolated.
My recordings don't sound like that at all. My vocal recordings sound like they are much much closer and are spreadout across the sound field. They don't have that commercial quality to them. Even my friends demo sounds like commercial quality sound. I don't understand what I'm missing here. I'm placing my vocals about 6 to 8 inches away from the mic like many books suggest so as not to pickup noise floor and room reflections. I'm also rolling of the lower frequencies as to make up for the proximity effect. I'm also recording the vocals in mono, like they should be for most pop recordings.
How do you move a vocal back in the sound field if your vocal is in mono. What am I doing wrong? If anybody with more experience knows what I'm talking about, please help me.