Hello,
Phase is such a hard thing to understand and it frustrates me on a daily basis.
This is my issue. I have two mono OH tracks that were measured (time aligned ) when recorded so they were equidistant to the snare. I have also looked up close in my DAW and they line up really well, I was happy with this.
When I solo the two OH channels (pre EQ) together both panned center and hit the phase reverse on one channel only most of the kick and snare drum information disappears and the cymbals loose volume and tone. I assume that means they are now out of phase and also that they must have been recorded in phase to begin with for that to happen?
BUT, if I pan them both hard LR I don't like the sound, it seems to stay very 'mono' with most of the information staying in the center. I visually confirmed this by using a phase scope. Now if I phase reverse ONE of the OH's, again some of the kick and snare spill disappears but the sound seems to 'spread' more, again, visually confirmed by a phase scope. When the OH's are soloed I can hear the effects of doing this, they both sound good and bad for different reasons but what is correct?
When placed in the mix I seem to prefer the sound of one reversed as the cymbals appear to have more stereo spread but when I just solo OH I prefer the sound of both the same. lol.
Not sure if that makes sense but if anyone has any ideas for me I would LOVE to hear them. Hopefully its just something silly I am doing lol.
Cheers.
Phase is such a hard thing to understand and it frustrates me on a daily basis.
This is my issue. I have two mono OH tracks that were measured (time aligned ) when recorded so they were equidistant to the snare. I have also looked up close in my DAW and they line up really well, I was happy with this.
When I solo the two OH channels (pre EQ) together both panned center and hit the phase reverse on one channel only most of the kick and snare drum information disappears and the cymbals loose volume and tone. I assume that means they are now out of phase and also that they must have been recorded in phase to begin with for that to happen?
BUT, if I pan them both hard LR I don't like the sound, it seems to stay very 'mono' with most of the information staying in the center. I visually confirmed this by using a phase scope. Now if I phase reverse ONE of the OH's, again some of the kick and snare spill disappears but the sound seems to 'spread' more, again, visually confirmed by a phase scope. When the OH's are soloed I can hear the effects of doing this, they both sound good and bad for different reasons but what is correct?
When placed in the mix I seem to prefer the sound of one reversed as the cymbals appear to have more stereo spread but when I just solo OH I prefer the sound of both the same. lol.
Not sure if that makes sense but if anyone has any ideas for me I would LOVE to hear them. Hopefully its just something silly I am doing lol.
Cheers.