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perhaps your speakers are out of phase? Or it was mastered out of phase or with a delay or chorus effect to sound like that.<BR>
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On Sun, 2007-09-30 at 14:17 -0600, Bearcat M. Sandor wrote:
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<FONT COLOR="#000000">Hey folks,</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">I'm not an audio engineer and i don't even play one on TV. I am a music </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">lover/audiophile who wants to learn about engineering so bear with me here. </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">I understand that when you hear something in the center of your sound stage </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">it's because the sound is equally loud in both channels and in phase.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">If you hear it spread evenly across the sound stage or even "everywhere in </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">front of you" the sound is equal in both channels and out of phase.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">I heard a recording the other day where a singer was equally loud in both </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">channels, but she was not center stage. Instead there was one of her in each </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">channel.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">How is that done? Thank you.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">Bearcat M. Sandor</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">_______________________________________________</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">Linux-audio-user mailing list</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><A HREF="mailto:Linux-audio-user@lists.linuxaudio.org">Linux-audio-user@lists.linuxaudio.org</A></FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><A HREF="http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user">http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user</A></FONT>
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