Topic: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

I've been trawling through the forum but have found no reference to this so I'm throwing it out here to see what you think.

I'm loving the placement of the mics in the space around the piano,but I'm finding it very cumbersome to place the mics in my stereo speakers.

What I was looking for was one volume & one pan control per mic so I could pan the mic where I wanted in my stereo monitors.

What I found was that for each mic i have to click on output one to change the volume for the left speaker, then output two to change the volume for the right speaker.

As a standalone, All mics are routed to output 1 & 2 anyway.  Within my Cubase SX3, the first 2 ouputs are routed as stereo into the mixer, with outputs 3,4,5 going to seperate channels, giving me 1 stereo channel, & 3 mono ones.

So it would make better sense to make the mic settings of each mic going to outputs 1 & 2 into a single volume, with a pan control added.

Waddayathink?

Luke

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Well, you decide which outputs are used, just by assigning how much of which microphone will be routed to which output, by how much. So Out 1 is left, Out 2 is right, and others would use your rear left, rear right and center speaker, if you have a surround system. Or something like that. There's no need for a pan control because you're in direct control of things.

Hard work and guts!

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

I do understand how it works - perhaps my explanation wasn't very clear - but I just don't think this is a very effective way to control the panning of mono mics in stereo.

What I'm suggesting is to use the standard used by all mixers - a single fader and pan per mic - for the first two outputs, which are effectively the stereo outputs.

I've just been trying to make a nice stereo spread with 2 mics on, and moving them around the virtual room.  I find it great to be able to move the mics around, but it's very non-intuitive to have to click between o/p 1 & o/p2 to adjust the volumes in order to get the mic in the place I want it in my speakers.

You mention surround systems,(which I'm guessing is still in a minority - is there anyone using Pianoteq in this way?).  I think it would be even more of a nightmare to place a mic accurately in the space. 

Cubase, for example, uses a circle to pan each channel in the surround field.

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

For recording an acoustic grand piano, the mics would be mono, and their placement and channel routing would be set to produce the desired sound.

This is pretty well what we have now in Pianoteq, and it seems to suit the piano - perhaps not an orchestra, but it suits the piano very well.

The little panning circles are quite common in software (the software  I use has them), but I've always thought they were a bit "mickey mouse" (the software writers didn't know what else to do).

I found the Pianoteq method awkward at first because I was accustomed to the circles, but soon discovered that individual mics offer far more control.

I use three mics, two of them located on either side of the pianist's head, the third directly over the centre of the soundboard just under the lid to get presence.  The fourth mic is set about 4 metres off the floor, and about 8 metres away from the piano on the right side.  Panning circles would be useless in this case.

Glenn

grammar edited 01oct09

Last edited by Glenn NK (02-10-2009 01:49)
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Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Hi Luke! Since you have the different microphones as separate outputs in Cubase already, wouldn't it make the most sense just to do the panning in Cubase? After all, it's the fact that the microphones go to separate outputs that makes the stereo image. I think that approach will give you the best control over the resulting sound.

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

My point was more to do with routing from within the Pianoteq interface.  There are two scenarios here:-

1. Standalone.  In my case I don't (nor ever will in all likelyhood) use surround, so only outputs 1 & 2 - stereo left & right - are available to me.  (Glenn NK - I mentioned circles in regard to surround mixing, not for stereo mixing.  Cubase uses a bar that you move a line within which also gives a visual indication where the sound is between your speakers, which could be used here too.)

Coming from an audio engineering background I have only ever had mics come in on a mono channel, & used one fader and one pan to place the sound in the stereo picture.

In Pianoteq it's as if the mic has been split into 2 channels, already panned left and right.  I now have to use the volumes of both channels to place the mic sound between my two speakers, which means a lot of mousing to switch between the o/p 1 & 2, then moving the faders.  And if it's too loud or soft I have move them one by one again, bit by bit.

I just don't find this quick or intuitive way of placing the mics in the stereo of my monitors.

2. Plugin. You're right RepeatChorus (nice name!) that within Cubase I can choose to route the mics to the outputs (1 to 1, 2 to 2, etc) and utilize the pan & volume from the cubase mixer, which is indeed very cool that Pianoteq allows me to do this.

But then I can't save that in the preset for another tune in another song.  And most times I want to start with a nice preset and later maybe flip it over to work in cubase on all 5 ouputs for details on each mic.

So I prefer to have the option of working with the stereo ouput even in Cubase.  My EZ Drummer has this sort of functionality too, for either stereo or multi ouputs within Cubase, which is fantastic.  But it has a very nice, simple but effective mixer desk within it's own interface.

http://www.toontrack.com/images/product...t2_big.jpg

greets, Luke

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

You mean you can't save several tracks with loaded VSTs and set up outputs, and pans and levels etc, and save it as a Track Template in Cubase?

Reaper can do that. And Cubase sucks

Hard work and guts!

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Don't know but it doesn't help if I want to play it as a standalone.

Last edited by Lukeman (02-10-2009 13:25)

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

You can have the same microphone setting for all the presets, even in standalone version, like this:

1. click on the "checkmark" icon, see top-right

2. select "All output settings"

3. click "Set as default"

4. now when you set all your microphones the way you like through the outputs you like, that setting will remain for all your patches.

Same is valid for VST version.

Hard work and guts!

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Luke:

Yes, I see what you mean with both the left and right channels activated with each mic, panning could be messy.

I only use either left or right activation for each mic - this way, they are truly mono microphones, and I can choose the level, timing and channel for each one.

I only do solo piano - with the piano "front and centre", so panning is a bit meaningless for me.  Using multiple mics gives me some semblance of "surround sound" even with reverb off.

If there were other instruments, I would likely use the same recording setup for the piano, and then pan the various instruments into their own space.

Glenn

Last edited by Glenn NK (03-10-2009 18:53)
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Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

mmmh maybe a little confusion here.
Glenn, I understand what you are saying but technically speaking a mono mic is always a mono source even if you route it to all five outputs; then if you use a conventional stereo two channel amp setup connected to out 1 & 2 you can divide the signal in both channel (with panpot control, balance control, volume per channel and alike) and give the illusion of movement between the two speaker but it still remains a mono signal routed to more than one channel. A stereo source could be a stereo mic with two capsules or two mono mics placed in a way that they can capture two different portions of acoustic field.
But maybe you already know these things or I misunderstood your post so let's move to my considerations concerning the topic:

I think, as it is, PTQ gives the best flexibility for every kind of recording simulation or live setting: you can easily setup it in a mono, stereo, quad and surround environment or use outputs as busses to duplicate signal for external effect processors and alike in a live situation. But, as we know, the more a thing is versatile the more complex..
So, practically speaking, I think most of the people here use PTQ basically to play piano and try to experience the best "close to real piano acoustic playing" sensation What I mean here is that I think the most of us use the mics routed to output1&2 ---> stereo system. For this kind of  situation Luke is completely right: a single pan command (be it a knob or a slider) is simpler than changing two volume slider that in the wrong hands can easily add clipping to the signal..
And last but not least we have a binaural option that in my opinion could be an idea for a third micing solution: binaural is the perfect example of stereo source with the "limitation" that the mics are in the same place of the listener ears. Obviously it is not a limitation because it's the characteristic that gives to this kind of recording the best spacial reproduction if used in the correct way. But what if we could choose mic position and listener position in respect to the instrument and have the result been sent to stereo output 1&2?


Conclusions (for people that don't bother to read all my post ):

1. PTQ micing system, as it is, permits the maximum flexibility at the cost of less simplicity but we can happily live with this (IMHO of course) because in a professional environment is perfect

2. A "stereo out" option could be added so, if activated, a panpot control could replace the "single output per mic volume" sliders being the only possible outputs 1&2

3. A "true space" stereo option would be fantastic letting the user choose only mic and listener positions and letting PTQ calculate right pan, volume,EQ and delay for every mic activated

Last edited by etto (03-10-2009 17:25)

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Etto:

Yes, of course a mono mic is always a mono source.  Two mono sources spaced some distance apart will yield a stereo sound if one mic is routed to the left channel, and the other to the right channel.

I adjust mic one so its channel one output is maximum and its channel two output is zero; and do the opposite with mic two (in fact I use four mics this way).  What this does in effect is pan mic one hard left, and mic two hard right.

There are limitless combinations in between these two extremes.  It's just that there isn't one slider or one panpot for each mic, there are two.

With a single panpot or slider, when one channel volume is raised, the other goes down - the relative volumes are predetermined.

In Pianoteq, I can adjust both channels independently - although much more complex than a single slider, isn't this an advantage?

Glenn

__________________________
Procrastination Week has been postponed.  Again.

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Hi Glenn,
yes you are right; as I stated above the actual method is the most versatile and creative. What I described as an option to add (not in substitution), as intended by Luke (I suppose), is a quicker and simpler way to manage five mics in a standard stereo field: five controls instead of ten with maybe better visualization of situation..  when you don't  need to use extreme pan settings only, could be practical to have the possibility to choose this way.
Cheers

Last edited by etto (03-10-2009 22:54)

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Hi Guys,

You can partially work around this by assigning a midi controller, say 100,
to the "left" and "right" of the same mic, but with reverse ranges.
So for instance, in midi mapping table you should have:

Controller 100 | Any | Mic[1].Level[1] | Off | +6.00
Controller 100 | Any | Mic[1].Level[2] | +6.00 | Off

Then you could do this for each of the other 4 mics, say with controllers 101 - 104 ...

The downside of this is that although it gives you the panning effect, it won't let you control the overall volume of mic1 between the two outputs (in this case it is fixed to +6.00).

Perhaps, dear Modartt, it would be cool if we had a little more abstract controller mapping.
For instance, say i'd like to control with controller 99 the overall volume of mic1, then we could add "variable parameters", say "m1v", assign contoller 99 to "m1v". And then have controller 100 control the panning, so assign it to "m1p". It is enough to have such variables always be floating numbers between 0.00 and 1.00, so the range should be fixed e.g.:

Controller 99 | Any | "m1v" | (0.00) | (1.00)
Controller 100 | Any | "m1p" | (0.00) | (1.00)

Now we "map" Mic1[1].Level[1] and Mic[2].Level[2] to expressions.
-- | Any | Mic[1].Level[1] | Off | m1v*m1p*6.00
-- | Any | Mic[1].Level[2] | m1v*(1-m1p)*6.00 | Off

Implicitly this means that both these parameters are mapped to controllers 99 and 100, via the variables of the expressions.
Of course it requires supporting arbitrary expressions...

By the way,
I've recently setup my Korg nanokontrol to have some knobs mapped to multi-parameters with different ranges. E.g. I have a "brightness" knob that controls the 3 "hammer hardness" parameters in different ranges:
Min : 0.19 - 0.35, Medium: 0.36-1.20, Max: 1.10-1.80.

I have another knob that controls "distortion", by simultaenously:
raising the volume from 0db to 12db,
raising the limiter sharpness from 1.00 to 2.00,
lowering the limiter threshold from -12.00 to -25.00
lowering the limiter gain from 0 to -9.00db

...

I drifted "a bit" to the controller mapping features... perhaps it should be on another thread. But let me suggest some GUI enhancement in the current domain:

Already we see that in the microphone matrix, we can select multiple cells, and then the "level" and "delay" sliders affect all of them simultaneously.
A simple enhancement would be that we could make simultaneous "positive" and "negative" selections, say by right or left mouse buttons respectively, so that the sliders have a reverse effect on the negative selections.
You could use different highlight colors for the cells (say - positive "green", negative "red").
Then the user could select two cells - the mic output 1 level - positive, and mic output2 level as negative. Now the "level" slider acts temporarily as a pan slider ...

How about it?
-- Eran

Last edited by etalmor (05-10-2009 08:21)
M-Audio Profire 610 / Roland Fp-3 / Reaper / PianoTeq!
www.myspace.com/etalmor

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Lots of ideas here
Thanx etalmor

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Yeah, too bad he didn't use the EDIT function to edit his posts, instead of multiposting. =

Hard work and guts!

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

EvilDragon wrote:

Yeah, too bad he didn't use the EDIT function to edit his posts, instead of multiposting. =

Note taken and applied! thanks EvilDragon.

M-Audio Profire 610 / Roland Fp-3 / Reaper / PianoTeq!
www.myspace.com/etalmor

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Etto & Etalmor, you get my reasoning.   Etto's description is perhaps a better way of what I was trying to describe.  Sometimes so difficult to explain what's physically infront of you!

Etto - 2. A "stereo out" option could be added so, if activated, a panpot control could replace the "single output per mic volume" sliders being the only possible outputs 1&2

Yep.  As new option is great.  I fully understand that the current setup is very useful as is too. 

3. A "true space" stereo option would be fantastic letting the user choose only mic and listener positions and letting PTQ calculate right pan, volume,EQ and delay for every mic activated

I started having ideas about this when I was writing the last post, but didn't add it as It wasn't clear in my head, but you hit the nail on the you-know-what!

My though process was actually to show two speakers in the corners of the virtual piano room, and where the mics were placed was where they would be heard from
the listener's perspective.  Now it dawns on me from your comment, Etto, that one could even move the piano in the space!  No need for 4 people, just a mouse click to move the grand, ha!
------------

Etalmor, good call, & lots of ideas.  I've got a korg nanocontrol (actually all 3 - they're fun & good), so I'll give you method a try.  I see you point about volume though, and your idea of offsets, and that would definitely work, if the system stayed the same.

But if Modartt added the stereo option & with midi controller values, we'd be clear out of the woods and mixing without even looking at the screen.  Playing piano & tweaking the nanoKontrol for intuitive placement of the mics' vol & pan  - ah, Manna from Heaven.

Thoughts please!

Luke

Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

Let's not forget that the more features (often these become gimmicks) that are added to a program, the less responsive it becomes (the bloatware of Windows?).

Pianoteq's purpose is to produce a realistic sound of one piano - whether it is a concert grand or a honky-tonk piano.  What is done with the sound is up to each individual, and as one can easily see with some reflection, the variations are infinite.

I'd rather the PT team spend their valuable time and effort in perfecting the sound from a single piano.

Glenn

__________________________
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Re: How About a Pan Setting for Stereo O/P 1&2 in 'Mic Settings'

I appreciate what you're saying, Glenn.  In the end it's up to Modartt to know the limits their piece of software.  Up to now they have shown themselves to be very good judges of what to put in to this software. - I was amazed at the level of detail already in this 3rd incarnation, with the virtual space. Who'd have thought that would appear.

I'm glad we've got this forum to throw our dreams and wishes out onto, and that the Modartt Peeps are genuinely interested in what we have to say.  Even if it may not all come true.

greets,
Luke