Stereo Vocals? |
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mer. 25 mai 2005, 11:17
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QUOTE is it more [I]desirable[I] to record a mic with two linkable mono's ? If you're recording a mono source, like a normal condenser mic, you only use one mono compressor. When the source is monophonic there's usually no sense in compressing it with a stereo compressor. But like I wrote above, most stereo compressors can act as two separate mono compressors. In this scenario you'd be feeding the signal into just one channel of the stereo compressor and outputting it mono. If you don't need to record or process any stereo signal you might as well go with a single channel mono compressor. With the price of a stereo compressor you'll probably get a better quality mono compressor. I haven't used RNC or FMR so I can't comment on their performance. QUOTE then again, maybe I don't need a hardware compressor at all - I use Ableton Live and I can put one of it's compressors on my recording channel without any latencey... people speak of the quality of the RNC...maybe should I go for a better quality plug in? There certainly are some top notch software compressors around, but they also cost money. If you aren't in a situation where you absolutely need a HW compressor I'd strongly consider going all software. I personally do almost all processing by software, but when recording vocals I use a hardware compressor and some other gear - just because I feel it is easier to quickly come up with the right settings when you have your hands on the actual hardware. But in the end it's a matter of preference and taste, go for the setup that you feel suits you best.
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mer. 25 mai 2005, 12:09
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QUOTE I take it there is no particular advantage to doing this (as that is not 'proper' stereo) and I may as well have been going through just the one of the channels on the Behringer. That is correct. QUOTE I would rather go the software route - can you recommend a standalone compressor that's good for vocals/guitar? Wouldn't you rather be using the compressor as a plug-in in your recording software? Some of my favourite software compressors include the basic allrounder Waves Renaissance (not forgetting Waves C1) + the more lavish Focusrite d3 and Drawmer Dynamics. There's also the less expensive new Sonalksis dynamic processors, but I haven't had time to check them out yet. I believe there are demo versions of most of the software I mentioned available, just check them out yourself and pick what's best suited for you. QUOTE I really appreciate this, it's been a hole in my knowledge that has been bugging me for a while. Glad to be able to help.
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