[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [ARSCLIST] Stereo of recording of oral histories ?
"Scott D. Smith" <sdsmith@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said::
>We have been seeing quite a few oral history recordings as of late that
>have been done in stereo. Other than the improved intelligibility, I
>don't see any compelling argument for taking this approach. With the
>increased availability of single-point stereo mikes, though, it is a
>much easier route to take than in the past. The AT-822 and 825 are both
>good choices for this kind of work.
I spent three years working for a daily one-hour radio program that
often featured two persons, either host-and-guest (sometimes over the
phone), announcer-and-host, interviewer-and-interviewee, or in one
program's case, two principals whose job it was to take one point and
argue opposing sides. In all these cases I would record each voice
onto separate tracks for clarity - when I went back to edit these
programs before broadcast, I would digitally silence the track for
whichever person was NOT speaking. That way the final mono mixdown
(this was an AM radio program) would feature person 1 speaking but not
the rumbles, breaths, sniffles and coughs emanating from person 2.
If you want to feature just one voice but still record in stereo for
ambience, I would suggest using a single stereo mic (or a coincident
pair) and recording in M-S stereo. This would give a much cleaner
sound if mixed to mono than using X-Y stereo for two reasons. One,
X-Y often attenuates anything directly in the center, because that
space is slightly off-axis to both mic diaphragms. Second, when you
sum M-S stereo to mono you effectively get the input from one cardioid
microphone, because the stereo information is cancelled out completely
due to its being out of phase. When you sum X-Y stereo to mono you get
the signal AND THE NOISE from two microphones.
Michael Shoshani
Chicago