< Holophonic Sound
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- algorithm0
the wonders of panning
- Mal0
Get your headphones on...
http://www.timothysaccenti.com/a…
- Mal0
- Mal0
- Mal0
- Mal0
- MikeColdFusion0
Its pretty easy to record like this, you need 2 of those lapel microphones and a stereo recorder. Put 1 microphone in each ear (facing out...duh) and record away.
- MikeColdFusion0
i forgot to add the crucial step, plug each mic to a separate channel. Make it so the left ear goes to the left channel, right ear to right channel. This method uses the phasing to create the illusion. Your pinna, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi... naturally phase the sound waves and your brain knows how to interpret the phasing to determine the location of a sound. 3D sound in computer games uses a similar technique.
- Mal0
- skelly0
It's not panning. Why does everyone keep saying that?
?
Go play with your panning knob and try to make a sound move from front to back. The dual-microphone setups a few of you mentioned is called "binaural" recording, and is not the same as holophonic.
They figured out how our brain determines the position of sound using the ear and they can replicate this by generating a reference wave when recording these examples.
"Holophonic Sound is produced by recording the interference pattern generated when the original recorded signal is combined with an inaudible digital reference signal. "
By recording both the the noise and it's reference signal, the wave recorded by the microphone is more like what our ears would be hearing if it were actually happening around our head.
They've had people correctly trace the paths of an airplanes flying over head by listening to holophonic recordings of the planes. That wouldn't be possible by simply panning the sound of an airplane engine.
- er0k0
aye' I don't know why others have said it's simply panning..much more complex. thanks for the explanation on this, too!