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#1
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I am experimenting with M-S mic technique and need some advice on relative
levels between the mid and the side tracks. I recorded a classical chamber music group using an AKG c-34 stereo mic ( http://tinyurl.com/56clz ). The capsules in the mic are coincident and arranged at 90° to each other. The front facing capusule was set to cardiod pick-up pattern and the the "side" facing capsule was set to figure-8 pattern. When checking levels, I noticed that the mid capsule's response was significantly less than that of the side capsule despite pre-amp levels being set identically. At the time I left the pre-amp levels as they were since the SNR was such that I could boost the signal afterwards with out an increase in noise floor. What I am wondering is now that I would like to transform the M-S pair into a LR stereo downmix, is it necessary for me to boost the signal of the mid track relative to the side track? If you could cc your replies to me via e-mail as well, this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance, Theo |
#2
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Theo,
I've never used a C 34, but I'm a little surprised that its figure-8 setting would be so much more sensitive than its cardioid setting. You may have some other kind of problem there; I'd suggest that you look for an explanation of the discrepancy. Anyway, when matrixing from an M/S recording to left/right stereo, you should definitely have some way of adjusting the levels of the "M" and "S" signals that you're feeding into the matrix. First of all these "M" and "S" signal levels must suit the matrix--neither overloading its circuitry nor being so low in level that the result is noisy. But yes, as long as the signal voltages aren't too high or too low for your matrix circuitry, you absolutely can adjust the two signals relative to each other. That's one of the main advantage of M/S recording: the amount of "S" relative to the amount of "M" is a direct control over the apparent stereo width of the recording, and you don't have to decide this setting while you record (where you may not have good monitor speakers available)--you can set it afterwards, when you matrix to L/R stereo. One way to do this is to start by feeding only a small amount of "S" signal into the matrix, then gradually bringing it up in level. If you do this, you can feel the image widen from mono to a reasonable stereo spread--and then beyond, if you push the "S" level too far (things will start to get "phasey," particularly when sound sources at either edge of the sound stage are prominent). Usually I find that there isn't very much doubt (on any given playback system, at least) about where the M vs. S levels should be set for any given recording, since the amount of hall reverberation generally increases as the stereo width increases, and there is a certain blend of spaciousness and clarity that feels persuasive, while anything else seems too far in one direction or the other. But please don't feel that you have to maintain the relative sensitivities of the two halves of your microphone; that's just a physical parameter of your microphone, and in this case, I would even consider it a little suspicious as I said before. Much more often the "S" microphone is a little less sensitive than the "M" microphone, and in addition, picks up less acoustic energy because it receives so little direct sound. In any event the capability of varying "M" vs. "S" gain at the matrix inputs is one of the keys to making good use of any M/S recording. --best regards |
#3
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#4
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I know this sounds stupid, but are you sure you got the right outputs for
middle and side? The pattern box on the C-34 can be a bit ambiguous sometimes. If your pres are set with the same gain, you can expect several dB difference in level between middle and side (the middle always being higher). Either that or your mic isn't working properly. To get M-S to decode and sound "right" you are going to have to have your sides look like a lower level than the mid. If your sides get too high, the fact that it is out of phase will begin to really show. --Ben -- Benjamin Maas Fifth Circle Audio Los Angeles, CA http://www.fifthcircle.com Please remove "Nospam" from address for replies "Theodore Chan" wrote in message... I am experimenting with M-S mic technique and need some advice on relative levels between the mid and the side tracks. I recorded a classical chamber music group using an AKG c-34 stereo mic ( http://tinyurl.com/56clz ). The capsules in the mic are coincident and arranged at 90° to each other. The front facing capusule was set to cardiod pick-up pattern and the the "side" facing capsule was set to figure-8 pattern. When checking levels, I noticed that the mid capsule's response was significantly less than that of the side capsule despite pre-amp levels being set identically. At the time I left the pre-amp levels as they were since the SNR was such that I could boost the signal afterwards with out an increase in noise floor. What I am wondering is now that I would like to transform the M-S pair into a LR stereo downmix, is it necessary for me to boost the signal of the mid track relative to the side track? If you could cc your replies to me via e-mail as well, this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance, Theo |
#5
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![]() Theodore Chan wrote: I am experimenting with M-S mic technique and need some advice on relative levels between the mid and the side tracks. Season to taste. When checking levels, I noticed that the mid capsule's response was significantly less than that of the side capsule despite pre-amp levels being set identically. At the time I left the pre-amp levels as they were since the SNR was such that I could boost the signal afterwards with out an increase in noise floor. A reasonable starting balance if the mid is a card would be to adjust the mid level when pointing at the source, rotate 90 and set the side level 6 dB down from that. That will give you virtual mics pointing at +-45 degrees when matrixed to LR. Increasing the side level splays that angle and decreasing it closes it. What I am wondering is now that I would like to transform the M-S pair into a LR stereo downmix, is it necessary for me to boost the signal of the mid track relative to the side track? Boost or cut to whatever extent you wish to get the kind of stereo image you want. Best use your ears for this. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#6
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![]() Just thought. maybe use M/S to capture the kit from out front enough and high enough not to get cymbal shimmy. Toss something in the kick, maybe add a snare mic? Regards, Ty Ford -- Ty Ford's equipment reviews, audio samples, rates and other audiocentric stuff are at www.tyford.com |