vomitHatSteve wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 7:46 pm
But we don't do weird recording techniques because they're the best plan, do we?
Ha I don't really do weird recording techniques at all. I'm in the stick-to-the-tried-and-true camp.
Having said that I guess it is pretty weird by today's standard to mic things at all. I mean I even mic bass guitar. Damn near no one does that anymore.
I record lots of guitar stuff in stereo where there's a stereo effect on it, otherwise mono. But on the stereo tracks I do use the wideness control to control the width.
Never actually thought about overheads though I'll admit. I try not to have toms more than about 40% out, and even less if there's lots of tom action going on. Usually it's less, but it depends upon what's going on. They're mono tracks panned anyway.
I do remember years and years ago asking people to send me tracks of themselves reading or singing a particular line - think I was putting together a chant thing for a song - I was surprised to get more than one stereo .wav of someone speaking into a single microphone...
Armistice wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 8:32 pm
I do remember years and years ago asking people to send me tracks of themselves reading or singing a particular line - think I was putting together a chant thing for a song - I was surprised to get more than one stereo .wav of someone speaking into a single microphone...
Was this from general users or home recorders?
I did a similar thing where I had a ton of user record a series of words for me to chop up into lyrics. (Ray participated) Almost all the files I got were stereo, but also a lot of them were recorded on handheld devices that just defaulted to it.
JD01 wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 3:53 pm
Years ago, I sent bubba a drum track where the overheads were in stereo but he thought they were panned a bit wide. He rendered the left channel and right channel separately as mono and then panned them how he wanted them.
In Reaper there's a cool way to do that without having to split the channels. If you right-click on the pan knob and select "Stereo Pan" it adds a Width knob in addition to the pan knob. You can dial it all the way down to mono or up to 100% left/right. I tend to use that on my overheads to narrow them down to 75% or so. That keeps the drum set from sounding like it's a mile wide, which I agree can be annoying when a tom fill sounds like it's happening across an entire room.
Armistice wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 8:32 pm
I do remember years and years ago asking people to send me tracks of themselves reading or singing a particular line - think I was putting together a chant thing for a song - I was surprised to get more than one stereo .wav of someone speaking into a single microphone...
Was this from general users or home recorders?
I did a similar thing where I had a ton of user record a series of words for me to chop up into lyrics. (Ray participated) Almost all the files I got were stereo, but also a lot of them were recorded on handheld devices that just defaulted to it.
Home recorders... one a member here who hasn't been around for a good long while.
Armistice wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 8:32 pm
I do remember years and years ago asking people to send me tracks of themselves reading or singing a particular line - think I was putting together a chant thing for a song - I was surprised to get more than one stereo .wav of someone speaking into a single microphone...
Was this from general users or home recorders?
I did a similar thing where I had a ton of user record a series of words for me to chop up into lyrics. (Ray participated) Almost all the files I got were stereo, but also a lot of them were recorded on handheld devices that just defaulted to it.
Home recorders... one a member here who hasn't been around for a good long while.
In Reaper there's a cool way to do that without having to split the channels. If you right-click on the pan knob and select "Stereo Pan" it adds a Width knob in addition to the pan knob. You can dial it all the way down to mono or up to 100% left/right. I tend to use that on my overheads to narrow them down to 75% or so. That keeps the drum set from sounding like it's a mile wide, which I agree can be annoying when a tom fill sounds like it's happening across an entire room.
THIS IS AWESOME!! Had no idea.
I must have done this years ago because I've always had a Width knob, as far as I can remember...
There's probably a thing, with VST drums where you get individual channels for each tom, to match your OH width at least approximately to the max width of your toms.
I must have done this years ago because I've always had a Width knob, as far as I can remember...
There's probably a thing, with VST drums where you get individual channels for each tom, to match your OH width at least approximately to the max width of your toms.
What I end up doing is using the routing to send every "mic" they offer to a separate channel and mix them with Reaper's tools.
I must have done this years ago because I've always had a Width knob, as far as I can remember...
There's probably a thing, with VST drums where you get individual channels for each tom, to match your OH width at least approximately to the max width of your toms.
What I end up doing is using the routing to send every "mic" they offer to a separate channel and mix them with Reaper's tools.
Same.
I think i would want ot use that width knob for something like acoustic guitars or something.