Recording Tips and Techniques
Home Studio Awesomeness Tip: Stereo Recording
In the never-ending quest for home studio awesomeness, here is a cool article on recording in stereo. The results can be incredibly cool, but it isn’t as simple as it may appear. The constant threat when recording using multiple microphones is the weirdness (usually not the good kind) that can happen when the same sound source is multiplied in a recording. Different versions of the same sound that are slightly offset in time can battle each other, cancelling out certain parts of a sound entirely, or boosting parts of a sound way above where it should be, or both. Usually both! So certain care needs to be taken when using multiple mics and this article will help with that. Enjoy!
http://www.prosoundweb.com/article/stereo_microphone_techniques/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed#When:13:29:20Z
Resources
Royalty Free Music File Download Here (right mouse click and choose “Save Link As” in Firefox or “Save Target As” in Explorer)
Drum Loop for lesson Download Here
Multiple Mics and The Ravages of Time
So much of capturing sound in our home studio recording efforts comes down to time. We get close to the microphone perhaps to help reduce room sound, trying to win the race against the reflected versions of our voices that have bounced off the walls.
Maybe we make a copy in our multi-track software of something we recorded with a single microphone – intending to delay one version by 30 milliseconds so we can pan both copies left and right to create fake stereo. This is only possible by manipulating time-related stuff, the relative positions of our two tracks to each other with respect to time.
All too often, copies of sounds we want to record enter our recordings without our permission, blending unpleasantly with their fellows, rendering the effects of college wave mechanics and bringing terms like constructive- and destructive-interference back into our brains. Amends can be made by moving stuff around, filtering, raising or lowering volumes at targeted frequencies, or any number of other remedies.
Such is the subject of the article below. Use more than one microphone to record something and you risk any or all of the wave-mechanic-y problematic symptoms on a heretofore unheard of level.
http://www.homerecordingshow.com/2011/11/show-141-multi-mic-time-aligning-and-aes-convention-recap/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+homerecordingshow+%28The+Home+Recording+Show%29
Video Logo
[jwplayer mediaid=”7828″] This is a video logo for our latest video tutorial product – The Newbies Guide To Audio Recording Awesomeness 2: Pro Recording With Reaper. It took me about 15 minutes to make using just Animoto, a video editor (I used Vegas but any one should work) and Omnisphere to add the sound.