
kip4
Well-known member
good point jonesey well put. 

AFA the mix process....
I start with levels and panning.
I'm looking forward to the day I can get my head around mono. Every time a discussion comes up on checking a mix in mono, I'm lost as to the use if it's going to ultimately end up in stereo. If everything is going to end up panned across the stereo soundscape, what's the point of checking it in mono ? Will not all the sounds take on different relationships with one another than the ones they'd have if they were all panned up the middle ? I just don't get it.I check in mono during the initial stages and spot check along the way. It really helps me sort out frequency collisions and establish overall levels for the base tracks. I use tons of panning, wide spread bg vocals, stereo piano etc. so stereo is equally important to me. It also makes me smile every time I turn off the mono and return to the land of stereo - it's like candy for a baby. Just a tool.
I'm looking forward to the day I can get my head around mono. Every time a discussion comes up on checking a mix in mono, I'm lost as to the use if it's going to ultimately end up in stereo. If everything is going to end up panned across the stereo soundscape, what's the point of checking it in mono ? Will not all the sounds take on different relationships with one another than the ones they'd have if they were all panned up the middle ? I just don't get it.
Then, put that baby in stereo and wet your pants! haha.
I hope my ridiculous metaphor makes sense...
It did. I just tried it and actually wet my pants.
Oh no, wait, I was watching pron. I'm going to try your mono thing now.
Think if you had 10 painted sheets of glass, all of different colors, all stacked on top of each other. You want to be able to look through all the layers and see the green sheet at the very bottom through all the rest, and the pink sheet in the middle, etc, etc. So, you have to scrape the paint from the other sheets to see that sheet's color, in that particular place.
So, to see your guitars, you have to cut away the other sheets with EQ, compression, etc. Same to see the snare drum, and on and on. If all of this is done in mono (hence the stacked sheets of glass) then your mono mix will be great!
Great Rami, let us know how it goes!
But I'm still with Grim on this one. If you've got all those painted sheets of glass in front of you, why stack them up behind each other in the first place? I would rather spread them all out so that you could see what is happening all at once. And if one is being obscured by another, either shift it, or do a bit of scraping.
I used to mix in mono all the time and I can vouch for it's benefits. But, to be honest, I'm just too impatient and end up panning things as soon as I can. So, I sort of abandoned the technique. Not because it's not good, but because of my ADD.
An interesting fact, in the late 60s as stereo was taking over from mono as the main format, certain records were mixed in both stereo and mono so obviously, a stereo record sounding good in mono wasn't that big an issue. No one knew who would buy what !so it better sound good in mono!
This is a very interesting observation. But is that true ? If a stereo recording is playing and different things are panned all over the place, even if you're on one side of the room, you still hear it as stereo. Or at least, I do !Anytime a person isn't right between two speakers, bam, mono listening.
80 % ? I reckon that's a bet you'd lose. Unless you're including your "not bang between two speakers" as mono.And in the end, I bet your mix will be heard in at least somewhat mono like 80% of the time
I think of mono over stereo in the same way I think of minidisc over CD. It's the poor relation {to a head with two ears on opposite sides}.and because we all know that listening in mono blows a fatty.![]()
Good point. Never thought of that. The thing that stopped me from going mono was the un-panning and panning of everything.For instance, I pan everything where I'll probably end up with it right at the beginning, and get a decent balance. Then, I toss a stereo widener on the 2-bus, set to Zero (making it mono)
But I'm going to look and see if there's a one button way to go mono in Reaper.
This is a very interesting observation. But is that true ? If a stereo recording is playing and different things are panned all over the place, even if you're on one side of the room, you still hear it as stereo. Or at least, I do !80 % ? I reckon that's a bet you'd lose. Unless you're including your "not bang between two speakers" as mono.
I'm not sure I'd use a stereo widener, though. I'd never use one on a stereo mix. I don't trust those things to not do something weird, even in mono.
There is. On the master fader, there is a button that allows you to switch from mono to stereo and vice versa
Yeah, I caught that. I never felt you were dissing. Actually, I thought that point you brought up was really intriguing. I had to really give it some thought.Btw, I mean no disrespect in this argument, just trying to get to the bottom of this!![]()
My thinking on that was that the recording is fixed as stereo or mono or 5.1 or quadrophonic, regardless of where in the room the listener happens to be.And yes, I would consider "Not directly between the monitors" as not exactly stereo. Maybe not mono, but not fully stereo either.
I don't see stereo or mono or quad or 5.1 as being determined by my position/location. If I'm in the bath and I have a stereo cassette or CD player playing from the bedroom or even out in the corridor, I can hear everything in the music. I don't personally need to identify where each specific sound is coming from for it to be stereo. It's stereo whether I can work it out or not. Volume also plays a part. And unless I'm wearing headphones/buds, I'm rarely ever directly in the centre of two speakers, not even in a car or van.First, I'm not sure how you hear in stereo from across the room. If you pic a random modern record (not one you've heard before, and not one you've worked on) and play it from across the room, I bet you can't tell me where the keyboard part is panned, or the lead guitar, or anything !
Aw, shucks.....you're super man in my book!![]()
My thinking on that was that the recording is fixed as stereo or mono or 5.1 or quadrophonic, regardless of where in the room the listener happens to be. I don't see stereo or mono or quad or 5.1 as being determined by my position/location. If I'm in the bath and I have a stereo cassette or CD player playing from the bedroom or even out in the corridor, I can hear everything in the music. I don't personally need to identify where each specific sound is coming from for it to be stereo. It's stereo whether I can work it out or not. Volume also plays a part. And unless I'm wearing headphones/buds, I'm rarely ever directly in the centre of two speakers, not even in a car or van.
Each morning as I'm loading up my van, I play one of my albums. I'm closer to the left hand speaker than the right and sometimes, what's coming out of the right hand speaker is fainter than what's coming out of the left. But if it were mono or mock mono, it would be the same wherever I am because the two speakers would carry identical signals. Aw, shucks.....![]()