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#41
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote Yeah, I guess that most pop music is mostly mono. They don't want to take a chance that the driver of the boom-SUV will miss anything that goes on over on the passenger's side, and vice versa. Not at all. It has to do with in the 60's they used to separate things really wide. John would be in the left speaker only and Paul only in the right. The drums in one speaker and the guitar in the other. Those were weird mixes and don't sound anything like reality. Engineers figured out reality is mostly mono, so they started mixing mostly mono to make things sound more realistic. There is an art to making believable stereo mixes. They are mostly mono, but certain things, like reverbs, delays etc., ARE spaced as far apart as possible. Its just that what sounds the most real is usually about 80% mono. REALLY! I'm starting to get the impression that the end point here isn't to restore the original stereo spread and image, but rather to make the stereo (as much of it as there is) into mono, then bugger it so that there's some stereo spread - which doesn't necessarily have to be the same as what went in to the encoder. No, you misunderstand. L+R combined with L-R is EXACTLY the same as L and R. Nothing is buggered. Nothing is lost, nothing is added. Now encoding is another story and stuff IS lost and added, but none of the lost and added is due to the L+R / L-R part. In FM radio they do it so there is an easy mono signal for places where the reception is too weak for stereo. In MPG they do it because it improves the quality. Julian |
#43
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![]() ""David G. Bell"" wrote Isn't most lossless stereo a bit of a fake anyway? Not the live recording with two mics, but the studio work -- as I recall it, the individual tracks are essentially mono, mixed together, and that mixing to create the stereo image only uses volume differences, not the phase differences that would be there in a true binaural recording. And that makes the difference signal a lot simpler. Does that make any sort of sense, or am I badly out of date on what happens in a studio? I'm badly out of date in a studio myself. I last mixed an album a couple years ago and its been 5 or 6 years before that since I did it regularly. But, yes, it is a fake, but an elaborate one Good engineers who use good mics, good mic placement, stereo mics, delays, eq effects, and reverbs can create amazing images. Yes they're fakes, but if you close your eyes its like being there. I've done a lot of live recording too, which actually is done being there and the fake studio stuff can be every bit as rich. Julian |
#44
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#45
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote I understand all of that. I've used the mic technique for years. What I don't understand is why they do this when encoding MP3. Someone started to give an explanation that mono encodes more efficiently, and that's what L+R is. I'll accept that for now. Hi Mike, I'll try one last time in over simplified terms. IF 80 % (roughly) of the information is MONO, THEN only 20% is L-R. It takes a lot less data to encode the small amount of 20% L-R information than either the full bandwidth L or R or Mono channels. Julian |
#46
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Encoding L+R and L-R is more efficient then encoding L and R because
the L+R carries most of the information so you have one "major" channel to encode and one minor (the L-R) channel instead of 2 major channels. Mark |
#47
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nicely said
"Mark" wrote in message ups.com... Encoding L+R and L-R is more efficient then encoding L and R because the L+R carries most of the information so you have one "major" channel to encode and one minor (the L-R) channel instead of 2 major channels. Mark |
#48
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![]() Julian Adamaitis wrote: nicely said thank you Mark |
#49
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#50
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![]() "Mike Rivers" I understand that. Oversimplification of a very complex process doesn't work for me. Try Mike's simplified version in this thread! I think maybe even you can accept it! It is absolutely true but doesn't get caught in concepts that require theory. If there's a useful oversimplification, it's the assumption that 80% of the information is mono. How is this deduced? Surely you don't have 80% complete duplication in the two channels. Maybe you have 80% duplication if you allow a 20% (or some other figure) fudge factor, saying that the two channels are 'close enough' 80% of the time. Is that how it works? No I'd GUESS its typically 80%, but it can vary drastically with program material. Like I said earlier the old Beatles stuff where everything was panned hard left and right was most certainly much less than 80% mono. I thought I made it clear the exact number was not necessary to understand the concept of L-R encoding. What is important is that IF *L-R is less than L+R* you save data. Even of you have 60/40% the techniques still works Why did I say 80%? I WAS GUESSING a purely ballpark number based on albums I've personally mixed and albums I've watched excellent engineers mix. I pan most instruments dead center or 10 /11 o'clock left or 1/2 o'clock right. Few things I pan 3:00 / 9:00 like stereo drum overheads, stereo pianos etc., and those things usually have much common information so there still isn't that much difference between left and right channels. The ONE and ONLY thing that do I always pan hard left and right is reverb, which in total volume is the quietest part of the entire mix. Based on that I came up with a totally seat of the pants number 80% mono. The technique works if it is only 60% mono. You are welcome to come up with a more precise number if that's what your after. My only point is it sounds better the more difference there is. Your criticism of my non-technical explanation is inappropriate as I was responding to a guy who just wasn't getting even after reading 3 explanations and being MORE precise would have probably confused him even MORE. You are welcome to come up with you own explanation that is both technically precise and simple to understand to non technical people. I look forward to reading it if you do so! This may be valid for a pop recording, but on an at least somewhat professional recorder like the Marantz (which, sadly, seems to have some quite un-pro features) you'd think they'd want to do better. I doubt that true two-mic stereo recordings have near 80% mono content. But then I've never thought about it, and I don't really know how to go about thinking about it. But I've seem plenty of Lissajous patterns and few of them look like tight ovals. The small amount of stuff I mix that IS panned very hard is VERY much out of phase That's the whole point of spreading it out as far as possible! It's still a minority of total decibels however. It still takes significantly less data to describe the out of phase material than the in phases material. Julian |
#51
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![]() Mark wrote: Julian Adamaitis wrote: nicely said thank you Mark by the way... I think I read he http://harmsy.freeuk.com/mosty=ADnc/ that the MP3 encoder automatically switches back to L and R encoding if it sees that the L-R signal is too complex and the L+R and L-R encoding stratagy would fail to give better results. So you get the best of both worlds, if there is a benefit to the L+R L-R encoding, it uses it, if not, it doesn't. Mark |
#52
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![]() "Mark" wrote by the way... I think I read he http://harmsy.freeuk.com/mosty*nc/ that the MP3 encoder automatically switches back to L and R encoding if it sees that the L-R signal is too complex and the L+R and L-R encoding stratagy would fail to give better results. So you get the best of both worlds, if there is a benefit to the L+R L-R encoding, it uses it, if not, it doesn't. Mark That makes sense. If the mono signal is more than difference, it would actually take more data to do it sum difference. Seeing as popel can create anything from mono to mostly stereo, a system that didn't know what to do in that case would be of limited use. Julian |
#53
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#54
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Carey Carlan wrote:
(Mike Rivers) wrote in news:znr1112958535k@trad: If there's a useful oversimplification, it's the assumption that 80% of the information is mono. How is this deduced? Surely you don't have 80% complete duplication in the two channels. Maybe you have 80% duplication if you allow a 20% (or some other figure) fudge factor, saying that the two channels are 'close enough' 80% of the time. Is that how it works? It's a reasonable assumption. Typically the most important source is centered. That applies to classical and modern content alike. If you encode the "mid" with high res and the "side" with low res, the most you can lose is the stereo image. Phase anomalies between the two recorded tracks were quite common in the analog days, especially after the signal had passed through a couple generations and at least one pass through a routing switcher. M-S encoding drastically reduced the sonic impact of those anomalies (while preserving mono compatibility.) |
#56
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote I hope I'm misunderstand you here, but I hope you aren't purposely making recordings that I would consider unlistenable just for the sake of making the compression algorithm work better. Say it aint' so, Joe. You are misunderstanding me. My goal is to make natural sounding recordings. Having Ringo sing out of one speaker and Paul out of the other is not making a natural sounding recording IMO! Mike you seem very knowledgeable on a lot of subjects. I don't understand why you think "listenable" recordings means stuff panned hard???? Simply not true, my good man! Julian |
#57
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#58
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Anyone out there with a PMD660? I have one, and I wonder if you have
the same problem I do: With no pad on, levels are normal. Unit is overdriven with moderate inputs, faster than I would like, but this isn't the problem. When I switch on the 20db pad, the level decreases by 38db instead of 20db. I checked this with a repeatable sound source (test tone through computer speakers) and got consistent results with different mics and phantom power on/off. I believe "20db pad" means the peaks should be 20db lower, right? Denon/Marantz has taken a while to answer this question, so I'm posing it to the RAP community. It makes this unit nearly unusable because 0db pad distorts amazingly fast, and 20db pad (actually 38db pad) requires turning up the gain until the thing is pretty noisy. That, and the fact that I can't see the LED meters in bright sunlight makes it difficult to make field recordings of a loud, outdoor activity (drum & bugle corps). Eric --- change x to z to reply |
#59
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote I don't. But what I read from your post to which I commented, I thought you said you intentionally recorded with wide separation. No, I said the exact opposite. Julian |
#61
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Thanks for your response! It is very strange the way this thing PMD660
pad operates, and this is the first recorder I have with a pad setting so I hope it's not user error. With the pad engaged the levels are microscopic, so it appears something is wrong. In my first recording, I could not use the no-pad because I get distortion even with moderate volumes. Changing the gain knob merely sets what level the flattops occur! With the pad in, I turn the gain knob up to 75% or more and the levels are still peaking at -30 or so. I did turn up playback volume (or normalized) but this made my recording sound like it was done oceanside! Although far from pro, I've done enough recordings to know something funky is going on. It is making my Sharp minidisc look pretty good. Maybe another PMD660 owner encountered this problem since I noticed it within the first few minutes of use. For the meters, I can probably build a hood or wear the recorder around my neck. ![]() Eric In article znr1113391513k@trad, says... In article 1113361704.4cade86c7b197c5e55469b302c428e3a@teran ews writes: While it might be the peaks that count, it's difficult to measure attenuation using peak values. This is where a good old fashioned VU (or VU-style) meter is useful. I've only fondled one of these recorders and not had an opportunity to put it on the bench, but it's easy enough to make a 20 dB pad that I can't imaging that they got that wrong - unless it's not really a pad. That would be bad. Some people have it in mind that the recording level is too low if the meters don't hit the peak much of the time. Perhaps you should try recording with the pad in and just turn up your playback volume a bit. Is the noise you get when you turn up the gain real electronic noise, or are you talking about background noise? Of course that will come up (along with what you really want to record) when you turn up the gain. One of the questions I asked of the person whos PMD660 I was looing at over the weekend was whether the meters were easy to read. He said they were, so I guess we have a difference of opinion there. He mostly records acoustic instruments in jam sessions, so overload is no problem for his application. In fact he was pretty happy using the internal microphones (which he was using when I saw him with the recorder). |
#62
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#63
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Recall that I have a Marantz PMD660 where the 20db pad seemed to remove
more than 20db of stuff. With the pad in, I turn up the gain to 75% with a decent source, peaks are still at -30 or so. The pad was simply too much and this made no sense. In article znr1113526669k@trad, says... Maybe it's broken, maybe it's a bug. Can you generate a steady tone that you can feed to the mic input and actually see what the pad is doing? Yes, it was broken or something like this. After speaking with the people at Denon/Marantz (and sending them audio files) they finally wrote a return authorization and I mailed it back. They returned it VERY QUICKLY without explanation, except that the work required four 22K resistors. Everything works great, gain staging is great, levels are decent, no distortion. This is a pretty good little recorder except for a few personal preferences. It's a mystery why my unit supposedly had incorrect or missing resistors in it. I bet there's more in the same condition, waiting to be discovered. Eric ---- change x to z to reply |
#64
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