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Check it in mono! (pg. 4)
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kitphillips
Not very new advice, it actually gets posted once a week.

Which isn't to say its not good advice of course;)
Beatflux
quote:
Originally posted by kitphillips
Not very new advice, it actually gets posted once a week.



My ass.
mfitterer1
quote:
Originally posted by sixofour.604
Except no one said test the tracks in mono, he said make the tracks in mono, ie. the final mixdown is mono only, for the sake of club system compatiability. Making the track mono compatiable DOES directly translate to "no unison, no panning, no use of the stereo field" So you can have bland dry tracks with heavy concern about being severaly limited by mono..or you can just say all and make them stereo.

Do you listen to anything? No, because your a ing moron.



Because I don't care about attention? When I release a track, I tell about 5 or 6 people. I throw it up on tindeck, and maby my myspace. Then I move on. I'm done with that track.

What is the merit in being famous or having recognition? I say there isn't an ounce of merit in it. But that is me. Unlike the entier EDM scene, I make muisc because I enjoy it, not because I want money or fame.

If I wanted to be famous, Id just copy deadmau5. :p


He was speaking about testing your track in mono before rendering the final stereo wav.

And nobody said anything about becoming famous or making money. If you had the option of having 6 million people listen to your song and a large % of them like it or 6 people to listen to your song and however many like it; which would you choose? I mean you'd just be stupid to say you wouldn't want as many people as possible to enjoy your hard work and ideas
Fledz
quote:
Originally posted by DigiNut
Almost all clubs do. If you stop for a minute to think about it, the reason is pretty obvious - in a packed club, the majority of people will be standing nowhere near the center of the stereo field and the sound would be awful.

Also if you've got 10 speakers in various locations all bouncing their sound around, the result for any listener is going to be practically mono anyway.

You sure?
I remember a similar conversation like this on In The Mix and I believe people mentioned that most good clubs in Australia were stereo.
Borbus
quote:
Originally posted by Lolo
Well regardless on how it sounds, when making dance music, I tend to respect these rules, although some may break them, they come from a vinyl mastering company back in 1998:

1°) The kick is always center-panned, so is the low part of the bass.
2°) Stereo fx such as delays, reverb, etc, shouldn't be panned at more than 66% Left or Right.

Yeah, the reason why this is very important for vinyl in particular is that a signal that is completely out of phase (ie. 180° out of phase) on the other channel will make the actual groove on the record come up too far making it too hard to track. It's one of the physical limitations of vinyl, but completely workable.

Diginut is right, you don't have to make your track be practically mono for it to sound ok mixed down to mono. Hard panning is absolutely fine, this will mix down to the centre (with a -3dB cut, see stereo panning laws) just fine. Stereo delay is simply panning and that is absolutely fine. Stereo reverb is a bit different, though, because if you turn the panning up to max it will actually have the signal 180° out of phase at some parts. If you mix together two identical signals that are 180° out of phase then they cancel each other out. It's a shame because it's a nice stereo effect.

But I still think you should worry /too/ much about it. It will sound worse in mono, but as long as the gist of it is still there ie. the leads and drums. Again, listen to the second half of Sandstorm and that mid bass part is 180° out so it disappears in mono. Come to think of it, I can't actually remember hearing that mid bass part in a club before...

Also here's a relevant article from SOS: http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/mar...eotechnique.htm

Also note, do not use stereo effects to make it sound good in headphones! Headphones are not stereo and need to be treated differently, or not at all as is the case most of the time. So just check to see if that ultra wide reverb is really worth it on a proper stereo system, because I've found that it usually isn't.
flutlicht junky
What is a good spreader?

I usually use Voxengo MSED and increase the side by about 2db or add a chorus and they sound good to me. So I should always just flick to mono just to make sure nothing weird is happening?
kitphillips
Isn't this the point of mid side mixing anyway? I dont' really worry about it since I try to avoid reverb and unison to make my sounds fatter, but I was under the impression that m/s mixing eliminated this problem.

And this topic is discussed every time I log on here, search ffs.
music2dance2
Here laidback luke mentions he produces in mono @ 2:30

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQSER4QsrPg
Sonic_c
this is the reply i got from my record label in response to this thread

Hi mate,

Don't worry about that for the time being. I'll go into it at a later time if you would like, but for now just concentrate on making great engineered tracks.

I've been involved in a few club installations, and it's a lot deeper than an email, but don't let it bother you for the time being.

Take it easy fella.

Regards


So does it matter?
sixofour.604
I guess the question is which label is it?

Nemesis44
Not sure if this has been pointed out, but there is a sacrifice to be made with mono compatability.
What you should be aiming for is a track that sounds great in stereo but also good enough to be enjoyed in mono.
Certain elements will be lost in the mono version but it's a question of working out what you can live without and what is essential to the track. As a simple rule of mixing you should really have most of the important sounds quite central anyway.

Your kick and low freqs should be nothing but, otherwise your mix can sound off balance.

But yes, test your tracks in mono, this is a must.

Cheers
Nem

PS, I hope none of my tracks were the main offenders... :nervous:
derail
quote:
Originally posted by Beatflux
My ass.


The importance of mono has been mentioned on numerous occasions in this forum. Not quite every week, but reasonably frequently.

It's always good to revisit topics though, something new may come out of the discussion.

It's good to have an awareness of how your song could be heard - listening to it on high end speakers, on terrible speakers, on headphones, in a car, on radio (if possible), from another room, in mono (both sides summed together), in mono (just the left or right speaker).

You can't cater to everything, but it's good to be aware of how it could be experienced by listeners.
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