L
Lionel_Hutz
New member
Hello,
I am recording a few rock tunes right now and have a question about recording vocals. I've read over and over that you should record the vocals with one (mono)mic to ensure they stay centered. Now the confusing thing is, when I pull up a professionally done piece of work, for example, the song "Fuel" by Metallica, (I chose this song because it starts off with a single dry vocal by itself.) When I pull the phase scope up in Wavelabs 4.0 and play the dry single vocal by itself, I notice that the phase indicates a stereo spread, not too large, but it is definetely not a mono image. So my question is, "Are they(Metallica) recording with two mono mics and summing them together left and right later on?" Oh yes, Green Day's song "Blood Sex and Booze" and The Offspring's "Bad Habit" have spots with just dry single vocals and it's the same image so it's not just Metallica...
Thanks in advance,
William
I am recording a few rock tunes right now and have a question about recording vocals. I've read over and over that you should record the vocals with one (mono)mic to ensure they stay centered. Now the confusing thing is, when I pull up a professionally done piece of work, for example, the song "Fuel" by Metallica, (I chose this song because it starts off with a single dry vocal by itself.) When I pull the phase scope up in Wavelabs 4.0 and play the dry single vocal by itself, I notice that the phase indicates a stereo spread, not too large, but it is definetely not a mono image. So my question is, "Are they(Metallica) recording with two mono mics and summing them together left and right later on?" Oh yes, Green Day's song "Blood Sex and Booze" and The Offspring's "Bad Habit" have spots with just dry single vocals and it's the same image so it's not just Metallica...
Thanks in advance,
William
