Coreysan
Max Output Level: -88 dBFS
- Total Posts : 126
- Joined: 2006/11/10 14:59:20
- Status: offline
How to get that great wide stereo sound
In a cakewalk tutorial project called "Cakewalk_Audiodemo", there's an audio track called "GTY Rhythm". Its got a good stereo mix for the electric gtr. How is that done? Is it by sending lower freqs to the left and higher freqs to the right? Or Chorusing? Coreysan
|
clintmartin
Max Output Level: -36.5 dBFS
- Total Posts : 3893
- Joined: 2009/10/11 12:16:43
- Location: Fort Smith, AR
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/07 21:24:27
(permalink)
Channel tools work great for guitars. Basically you have a guitar recorded in stereo, Pull up channel tools and delay one side a bit. You can also clone a track, pan them and nudge one a little...5 to 10ms.
|
tunekicker
Max Output Level: -65 dBFS
- Total Posts : 1261
- Joined: 2005/10/28 14:39:50
- Location: Grand Junction, CO
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/07 23:38:21
(permalink)
Helmut Haas discovered that "A single reflection arriving within 5 to 30 ms can be up to 10 dB louder than the direct sound without being perceived as a secondary auditory event ( echo)." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haas_effect So placing delay on one side as Clint says can work to widen the mix, and it actually works ok up to 30 ms. Peace, Tunes
|
gearandguitars
Max Output Level: -89 dBFS
- Total Posts : 70
- Joined: 2012/09/21 14:44:06
- Location: austin texas
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 02:18:40
(permalink)
|
Guitarhacker
Max Output Level: 0 dBFS
- Total Posts : 24398
- Joined: 2007/12/07 12:51:18
- Location: NC
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 08:13:55
(permalink)
I like to record the track twice..... not clone it... and then pan them at least 60% R/L. It makes for a nice wide sound...
My website & music: www.herbhartley.com MC4/5/6/X1e.c, on a Custom DAW Focusrite Firewire Saffire Interface BMI/NSAI "Just as the blade chooses the warrior, so too, the song chooses the writer "
|
robert_e_bone
Moderator
- Total Posts : 8968
- Joined: 2007/12/26 22:09:28
- Location: Palatine, IL
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 10:34:12
(permalink)
Tony Banks, the keyboard player from Genesis, got a nicely fat keyboard sound by doing the slight delay on one side trick - works really nicely. Bob Bone
Wisdom is a giant accumulation of "DOH!" Sonar: Platinum (x64), X3 (x64) Audio Interfaces: AudioBox 1818VSL, Steinberg UR-22 Computers: 1) i7-2600 k, 32 GB RAM, Windows 8.1 Pro x64 & 2) AMD A-10 7850 32 GB RAM Windows 10 Pro x64 Soft Synths: NI Komplete 8 Ultimate, Arturia V Collection, many others MIDI Controllers: M-Audio Axiom Pro 61, Keystation 88es Settings: 24-Bit, Sample Rate 48k, ASIO Buffer Size 128, Total Round Trip Latency 9.7 ms
|
John
Forum Host
- Total Posts : 30467
- Joined: 2003/11/06 11:53:17
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 11:42:33
(permalink)
How to get that great wide stereo sound Get a really big house!
|
gearandguitars
Max Output Level: -89 dBFS
- Total Posts : 70
- Joined: 2012/09/21 14:44:06
- Location: austin texas
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 11:46:59
(permalink)
Guitarhacker I like to record the track twice..... not clone it... and then pan them at least 60% R/L. It makes for a nice wide sound... This is actually my preferred method now too.
|
Jim Roseberry
Max Output Level: 0 dBFS
- Total Posts : 9871
- Joined: 2004/03/23 11:34:51
- Location: Ohio
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 12:05:48
(permalink)
This is actually my preferred method now too. Adding a slight delay to a copied guitar track can affect the stereo position (pan) I (too) prefer to manually double-track parts that need a wide stereo image. The subtle differences between the two takes creates a nice wide animated stereo image. Much more dynamic/alive sounding that simply cloning a track and adding delay... Stereo pitch/modulation/delay effects can also enhance the stereo image.
|
datadog
Max Output Level: -89 dBFS
- Total Posts : 75
- Joined: 2006/05/25 00:38:10
- Location: Meridian, Idaho
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 12:06:19
(permalink)
Guitarhacker I like to record the track twice..... not clone it... and then pan them at least 60% R/L. It makes for a nice wide sound... This is actually my preferred method now too.
Yes, this method sounds great in stereo but can lose mono compatibility
datadog http://www.518music.com i7 920, Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD3R, Mushkin DDR3 1600, ATI Radeon HD 5450, RME Fireface UFX, UAD2's, Windows7 x64, Sonar X3C x64, Reaper 4 x64, Studio One Pro V2.61 x64, NI Komplete 6, Waves v9 Gold, SSL Bundle x64.
|
Jim Roseberry
Max Output Level: 0 dBFS
- Total Posts : 9871
- Joined: 2004/03/23 11:34:51
- Location: Ohio
- Status: offline
Re:How to get that great wide stereo sound
2012/10/08 12:13:56
(permalink)
Yes, this method sounds great in stereo but can lose mono compatibility FWIW, The double-tracked example is actually *less* prone to mono compatibility issues than adding a copied track delayed by 5-30ms. The delayed track will likely cause phase issues when summed to mono. The true doubled part's waveform will be far more random than an exact copy... (less prone to phase issues when summed to mono)
|