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#1
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
From my days of louder music, I have a right ear that hears much lower
volume then my left ear........ I guess having my keyboard up near that drummers snare drum for all those years kind of beat on one ear more then the other. Anyway, these days is it really an issue for mixing. I find that I have to move off center to really get a true stereo balance in my head - that will work for other people. Does anyone else have that dead ear and if so what do you do about it? I've tried everything. |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
"Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in message ... From my days of louder music, I have a right ear that hears much lower volume then my left ear........ I guess having my keyboard up near that drummers snare drum for all those years kind of beat on one ear more then the other. Anyway, these days is it really an issue for mixing. I find that I have to move off center to really get a true stereo balance in my head - that will work for other people. Does anyone else have that dead ear and if so what do you do about it? I've tried everything. Danny, Regardless of the mixing issue, I think you should have your ears tested, and it is likely you will have to wear a hearing aid to compensate. Poly |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 28, 12:13*pm, "polymod" wrote:
"Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... From my days of louder music, I have a right ear that hears much lower volume then my left ear........ I guess having my keyboard up near that drummers snare drum for all those years kind of beat on one ear more then the other. Anyway, these days is it really an issue for mixing. I find that I have to move off center to really get a true stereo balance in my head - that will work for other people. Does anyone else have that dead ear and if so what do you do about it? I've tried everything. Danny, Regardless of the mixing issue, I think you should have your ears tested, and it is likely you will have to wear a hearing aid to compensate. Poly I've got about 15-20% less volume in my right ear.... I know that much already but a hearing aid is not going to happen. its just enough to mess everything up. I was talking to the doc and he said that most people have one ear like that from various jobs and such. I think most musicians have it for sure! If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Turning up the volume on the speakers doesn't work, A hearing aid wouldn't work for mixing at all since you're messing up the actual signal with more electronics and all. The only thing I can do is move a little to one side and then test the mix sitting backwards so I give the other field of sound a fair listen. .. It's more about hearing imbalance in the first place. I'm surprised more people haven't address this issue. I would have thought it was a big deal to most on stage types. |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
"Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in message ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it. Best, Poly |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 28, 5:35*pm, "polymod" wrote:
"Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it. Best, Poly Lord I sit here late at night reading these comments with my ears ringing from a loud drummer. I record clients and get roped into playing live. It's modern country abd,but the drummer plays like its a rock n roll thing. At any rate get your mixes good. Flip L and R around. Have a younger assistant help you if you can afford it. Eq things towards your better ears side then pan them. My left ear is lower in hearing high end . So if I pan a bright hi hat or a tamborine to the left I might flip L and R to see if it's too loud. getting old is a bitch then we die. GT |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 29, 1:00*am, glenn taylor wrote:
On Oct 28, 5:35*pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it. Best, Poly Lord I sit here late at night reading these comments with my ears ringing from a loud drummer. I record clients and get roped into playing live. It's modern country abd,but the drummer plays like its a rock n roll thing. At any rate get your mixes good. Flip L and R around. Have a younger assistant help you if you can afford it. Eq things towards your better ears side *then pan them. My left *ear is lower in hearing high end . So if I pan a bright hi hat or a tamborine to the left I might flip L *and R to see if it's too loud. * getting old is a bitch then we die. GT Also try listening from the next room. That sometimes shows up problems in a mix instantly! Peace, Paul |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 29, 1:15*am, PStamler wrote:
On Oct 29, 1:00*am, glenn taylor wrote: On Oct 28, 5:35*pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it.. Best, Poly Lord I sit here late at night reading these comments with my ears ringing from a loud drummer. I record clients and get roped into playing live. It's modern country abd,but the drummer plays like its a rock n roll thing. At any rate get your mixes good. Flip L and R around. Have a younger assistant help you if you can afford it. Eq things towards your better ears side *then pan them. My left *ear is lower in hearing high end . So if I pan a bright hi hat or a tamborine to the left I might flip L *and R to see if it's too loud. * getting old is a bitch then we die. GT Also try listening from the next room. That sometimes shows up problems in a mix instantly! Peace, Paul That's not a bad idea. Thanks |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 29, 1:00*am, glenn taylor wrote:
On Oct 28, 5:35*pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it. Best, Poly Lord I sit here late at night reading these comments with my ears ringing from a loud drummer. I record clients and get roped into playing live. It's modern country abd,but the drummer plays like its a rock n roll thing. At any rate get your mixes good. Flip L and R around. Have a younger assistant help you if you can afford it. Eq things towards your better ears side *then pan them. My left *ear is lower in hearing high end . So if I pan a bright hi hat or a tamborine to the left I might flip L *and R to see if it's too loud. * getting old is a bitch then we die. GT Glen- are you still in CO? I changed my facebook to cut down on confusion. Drop me a note through the reply author or drop a note on https://www.facebook.com/danny.taddei and I'll get back to you there. |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 29, 11:13*am, "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~"
wrote: On Oct 29, 1:00*am, glenn taylor wrote: On Oct 28, 5:35*pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... On Oct 28, 12:13 pm, "polymod" wrote: "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote in ... If you pick up a phone and listen for the difference between ear to ear, you'll see. I bet you have it - wouldn't wish it on you but I'd bet you do at least to some point. Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician), I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. Still, I wouldn't rule out an aid. A buddy of mine who runs a music teaching studio with over 300 students wears one....you'd never know he had it.. Best, Poly Lord I sit here late at night reading these comments with my ears ringing from a loud drummer. I record clients and get roped into playing live. It's modern country abd,but the drummer plays like its a rock n roll thing. At any rate get your mixes good. Flip L and R around. Have a younger assistant help you if you can afford it. Eq things towards your better ears side *then pan them. My left *ear is lower in hearing high end . So if I pan a bright hi hat or a tamborine to the left I might flip L *and R to see if it's too loud. * getting old is a bitch then we die. GT Glen- are you still in CO? I changed my facebook to cut down on confusion. Drop me a note through the reply author or drop a note onhttps://www.facebook.com/danny.taddei and I'll get back to you there. +1 on mixing from a different room. Everytime I don't get up and listen from a distance the mix suffers. GT |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 28, 12:30*pm, "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~"
wrote: From my days of louder music, I have a right ear that hears much lower volume then my left ear........ I guess having my keyboard up near that drummers snare drum for all those years kind of beat on one ear more then the other. Anyway, these days is it really an issue for mixing. I find that I have to move off center to really get a true stereo balance in my head - that will work for other people. Does anyone else have that dead ear and if so what do you do about it? I've tried everything. _______ I'm also weak on the right. I read it somewhere that about 55% of folks hear better on the left. Combine that with the fact that most headphones are wired on the left(meaning more resistance to the right ear cup). When doing projects in pro tools or audacity I always tend to mix the right channel about 1/2 to 1dB louder to compensate for the above. -ChrisCoaster |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
Since I use my ears for a living (I'm a piano tuner as well as a musician),
I have my ears checked regularly. My hearing is perfect, which is amazing since I played for many years in a progressive rock band with the drummer always to my left. Guess I was lucky. You're lucky because you don't do it everyday. A "quiet" band is usually at least 100 dB which will cause damage in ~30 minutes. I am surprised you haven't lost a light of the high-end, whcih probably wouldn't affect your piano tuning. It's good that you get your ears checked. Mike |
#12
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lopsided hearing-
On Oct 30, 10:12*pm, ChrisCoaster wrote:
On Oct 28, 12:30*pm, "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) wrote: From my days of louder music, I have a right ear that hears much lower volume then my left ear........ I guess having my keyboard up near that drummers snare drum for all those years kind of beat on one ear more then the other. Anyway, these days is it really an issue for mixing. I find that I have to move off center to really get a true stereo balance in my head - that will work for other people. Does anyone else have that dead ear and if so what do you do about it? I've tried everything. _______ I'm also weak on the right. I read it somewhere that about 55% of folks hear better on the left. Combine that with the fact that most headphones are wired on the left(meaning more resistance to the right ear cup). *When doing projects in pro tools or audacity I always tend to mix the right channel about 1/2 to 1dB louder to compensate for the above. -ChrisCoaster I know a lot of people have one bigger foot - I never knew about the ears. Actually though, I blame a lot of the lost to a band but reality is that I had several firecrackers go off next to my right ear when I was a kid and was attempting to throw them. (hey guys watch this). Oh well, I was a kid. |
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