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Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
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The problem with this whole line of thought is that this is not mid-side. Mid Side is a very useful stereo microphone technique, especially when it comes to mono compatability. A ambient mic does not make a side mic. the whole point of that mic technique is sum and difference. The middle mic has everything that a figure eight mic (as the side) does not have. To take a sum and a difference of those two mics makes a stereo image. Two individual microphones in different locations will never make mid and side. I don't mean to be blunt or rude here, but I do need to try to clarify a correct usage of a technique. Two mics as originally described is mono only. It cannot be stereo. --Ben |
Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
Ben:
I think you and I are actually in agreement. In my next to last paragraph (as quoted above) you'll note that I say I would not do what the OP suggests (namely using a mono mic -- presumably a pressure mic -- deep in the house, then mixing it in as if it were a "side" mic). And I give my reasons for disagreeing with that proposed technique. Indeed, I think the only time the M/S matrix really produces true stereo results is with a coincident pair of proper M/S mics (i.e. the Side mic is figure-8 facing sideways). That is not what was proposed by the OP so the results will be entirely artificial and technically prone to numerous problems. -- But I did find it an interesting sidelight that, if one followed the OPs proposed setup, the "reverb" mic would be added to the left channel, and subtracted from the right channel; therefore it would entirely drop out of the mono mix. (That's what I was trying to illustrate with the math.) So this particular proposed means of getting a bogus stereo mix, would in fact produce a clean mono mix, consisting of only the front mic. -- Be that as it may, I agree with you, the proposed mix is not the best way to go about things. |
Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
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Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
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Of course it would be much better if you had a recorder with at least three tracks, so you could put a stereo mic out in the house. Better yet if you could then delay the stage mic to be coincident in time with the house mic. |
Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
Going back a tad to this..
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Boundary mics above work rather like an omni, or very, very wide cardioid - they cannot work as a boundary mic unless they're on a large surface - other than that, they're not boundaries. Sure - you can try clever placement on the drummer, but why not, if you really must mic the drums, just use an overhead, or an overhead with snare, or the verity common kick, snare overhead system. To complicated for a casual video without real sound people to work it! |
Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
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Re: Soundboard Pre Mix
That is NOT what I'm saying. I'm merely pointing out there is no absolute requirement to stick a mic on every drum. The style of music dictates the drum mic technique you use. Individually eq'd and processed rock drums with perhaps sampled sound slavered over need isolation, whereas many other drums styles just need a more modest amount of mics to sound good. I'm quite aware that there won't be drums or other instruments in the audience mix, so you need to replace them - but a 3 mic approach works really well for most styles, and for big band, just one or two is quite sufficient. The reality is that most video people do not have sufficient facilities to hand to manage multi-mic audio mixing themselves. As it happens, I do - and can record to hard drive 24 channels, or 16-32 on a computer based system. There is no 'standard' solution, it's worked on fluidly to get the best results for each project. My point is simply that you don't need to mic up every single thing just because you can.
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