
nate_dennis
Well-known member
So after a year of picking your collective brains, planning, researching, etc I finally started a proper project. But I've run into a weird issue that maybe you can help me with.
I programed my drums and synced it to my 488mkII. I decided to try to make them as realistic as possible, so I ran them through my KRK's. I put one mic on the left speaker and ran both speakers together. My reasoning was that I wanted the mic to pick up some of the right speaker but mainly the left. Then I reversed this. I thought this would give a decent illusion of overhead mics. Since each one picked up a little of both sides but focused on one. (I hope that makes sense.) Amazingly, even though they were recorded seperately I still ended up with phase issues. I re-did the experiment using only one speaker at a time and this helped tremendously. But i still had a little bit of a problem. This doesn't make sense to me. Is there any way for me to do this without issues? Thank you for all of your help thus far and in the future.
-Nate
I programed my drums and synced it to my 488mkII. I decided to try to make them as realistic as possible, so I ran them through my KRK's. I put one mic on the left speaker and ran both speakers together. My reasoning was that I wanted the mic to pick up some of the right speaker but mainly the left. Then I reversed this. I thought this would give a decent illusion of overhead mics. Since each one picked up a little of both sides but focused on one. (I hope that makes sense.) Amazingly, even though they were recorded seperately I still ended up with phase issues. I re-did the experiment using only one speaker at a time and this helped tremendously. But i still had a little bit of a problem. This doesn't make sense to me. Is there any way for me to do this without issues? Thank you for all of your help thus far and in the future.
-Nate