MULTITRACK AUDIO PRODUCTION
Questions for Week 4
Due by 4:00 on Tuesday, Week 5
- What is coincident micing and what is good about it?
This is a type of micing with directional microphones. Where the microphone are stacked right of top of one another. Where the left mic is facing the right of the ensemble and the right mic is facing the right of the ensemble, with about a 90-degree angle in between them. In this micing there is a lack of difference in time arrival and almost no chance of phase issues.
- What is near-coincident micing and what is good about it?
Near-coincident micing is where two mic are placed right next to each other then spread with the end of the mics closer to each other and distance between the front of the cardioid. Gives a wider stereo image and replicates human hearing
- What is a spaced pair and what is good about using it?
Two cardioid microphones are placed apart from each other. If you’re micing an instrument you can collect sound from two different areas on the instrument one spot might have a richer bass with the other might have a sparkling treble this micing you can get both sounds.
- What is X-Y micing and what is good about it?
X-Y micing is where the left mic is facing the right of the ensemble and the right mic is facing the left of the ensemble, with about a 90 degree angle between them. The mics are staked on top of one another. This is good for eliminating phase issues.
- What is ORTF micing and what is good about it?
ORTF micing is where two mic are placed right next to each other then spread at a 110-degree angle with the end of the mics touching and a 17cm distance between the front of the cardioid mics. Gives a wider stereo image and replicates human hearing,
- What is the advantage of having a 110-degree angle between cardioid mics when recording to stereo? It gives a wider stereo image than x-y recording and eliminates the center emphasis
- What is the Blumlein system? Two bidirectional mics staked on top of each other
- What is proximity effect? Increase in bass frequencies as a directional mic approaches the sound source
- What is the key command for “Save” in Pro Tools? Command S
10. What are the key commands in Pro Tools for zooming in and out (looking at waveforms)? Command [ and ]