ruairioflaherty
Well-known member
Marik,
I'm probably repeating what the others have said but I really think you should take your recording to someone else. There are several reasons why -
-Are you sure your monitoring environment is good? When I say good I don't mean nice sounding I mean level matched channels, flat frequency response, room resonances controlled, good speaker positioning and most of all good translation to other systems. A good M.E. will have all of this dialled in (and verified by years of good masters translating well)
-Who did the MS recording? Are you sure they were done correctly? I use MS on almost every acoustic recording session I do and I have often walked into the control room and realised that I left the S mic on cardioid or some other silly mistake. Last week I was recording an upright piano and on the 2 tune the piano was sounding wrong - it turned out the piano player had hit the mics sitting down and moved them slightly (1 inch or so). What mics, pres and converters were used? If the delay between the M and S is real, how did it happen?
-I'm not calling into question your credentials but the way you are speaking about matrixing the MS makes zero sense. I'd be shocked if someone with your musical experience finds the solution in some crazy random solution like those you are suggesting. MS is MS - there's really only one way to decode a properly recorded signal (obviously you can use as much S channel as floats your boat). Are you sure you are decoding the MS correctly (I've made this mistake too).
Get some help or if you like put up a link to a minute of the audio and those of us with some experience in this area can offer real advice.
Best of luck,
Ruairi
I'm probably repeating what the others have said but I really think you should take your recording to someone else. There are several reasons why -
-Are you sure your monitoring environment is good? When I say good I don't mean nice sounding I mean level matched channels, flat frequency response, room resonances controlled, good speaker positioning and most of all good translation to other systems. A good M.E. will have all of this dialled in (and verified by years of good masters translating well)
-Who did the MS recording? Are you sure they were done correctly? I use MS on almost every acoustic recording session I do and I have often walked into the control room and realised that I left the S mic on cardioid or some other silly mistake. Last week I was recording an upright piano and on the 2 tune the piano was sounding wrong - it turned out the piano player had hit the mics sitting down and moved them slightly (1 inch or so). What mics, pres and converters were used? If the delay between the M and S is real, how did it happen?
-I'm not calling into question your credentials but the way you are speaking about matrixing the MS makes zero sense. I'd be shocked if someone with your musical experience finds the solution in some crazy random solution like those you are suggesting. MS is MS - there's really only one way to decode a properly recorded signal (obviously you can use as much S channel as floats your boat). Are you sure you are decoding the MS correctly (I've made this mistake too).
Get some help or if you like put up a link to a minute of the audio and those of us with some experience in this area can offer real advice.
Best of luck,
Ruairi