
heatmiser
mr. green christmas
Ok, probably a dumb question and not sure I can articulate it well enough, but here goes....Is there anything besides just moving the pan knob or fader all to the way to one side that can affect how far panned to one side a particular sound is perceived to be by the listener?
I'm thinking the gear makes a difference, no? I mean, when I had my old fostex 4 track tape deck, I'd pan all sorts of things far left and right, but in retrospect, it sounds kind of small and not that spread out.
I now have a digital portastudio where the panning is broken down into 63 units of measurement on both sides...I figured this just meant an increased ability to fine-tune, or it was like a spinal tap "this amp goes to 11" kind of thing, but really, when pushing something far left or right with this machine, it actually sounds much more spread out...that got me thinking - is there a set amount of panning that can be done, or is our perception of L/R entirely relative to the other sounds in the piece? Or, does certain gear or techinques enable one to pan sounds so that they appear more spread out then they would otherwise be?
I guess I just hear some recordings where certain sounds just seem to come out of left field in a cool way, and no amount of panning in my recordings give that same sense of space...I'm not talking about surround sound mixes or anything here. Again, sorry if this is a dumbass ?, but it's interesting to me...
I'm thinking the gear makes a difference, no? I mean, when I had my old fostex 4 track tape deck, I'd pan all sorts of things far left and right, but in retrospect, it sounds kind of small and not that spread out.
I now have a digital portastudio where the panning is broken down into 63 units of measurement on both sides...I figured this just meant an increased ability to fine-tune, or it was like a spinal tap "this amp goes to 11" kind of thing, but really, when pushing something far left or right with this machine, it actually sounds much more spread out...that got me thinking - is there a set amount of panning that can be done, or is our perception of L/R entirely relative to the other sounds in the piece? Or, does certain gear or techinques enable one to pan sounds so that they appear more spread out then they would otherwise be?
I guess I just hear some recordings where certain sounds just seem to come out of left field in a cool way, and no amount of panning in my recordings give that same sense of space...I'm not talking about surround sound mixes or anything here. Again, sorry if this is a dumbass ?, but it's interesting to me...
