Its gone....nooooooo!Ogopogo wrote:edit. nope i got confused.
You had a good case there and was very interesting
I suppose I explained some of the basics well enough but I was wrong about what happens to each side of a stereo signal when it's panned with Bitwig's pan mode so it was pretty misleading.goatgirl wrote:Its gone....nooooooo!Ogopogo wrote:edit. nope i got confused.![]()
You had a good case there and was very interesting
Putting a plugin on every track, that needs it, has got to be easier than splitting stereo parts and manipulating separately?Suloo wrote:inserting a plugin on every track just for this task is pretty tedious.
yea, hopefully..would be interesting to hear what they think about this.goatgirl wrote:It may well be a toggle mode button on the mixer or some other wonderful idea.
Well, you do loose the full stereo image, but it is still quite normal to narrow the whole image and place it a little bit left or right, with drums for example. Or with two synths that are quite similar in the frequency range.dom@bitwig wrote:In general you record stereo tracks because you want to get a true stereo representation of the instrument you record.
In most cases, if you want to pan this in your mix more to the left now, for example, you only want to emphasize the content of the left channel and not also bring over the content of the right channel - because if you do, you loose the stereo imaging of the signal.
yesdom@bitwig wrote: Panning the left channel of a stereo track to the left as well as the right channel to the left is the same as converting your stereo signal into a mono signal and panning that to the left. If you wish to do so, you can also directly record in mono.
yes but this is limiting you to equal amounts of left and right channel.dom@bitwig wrote: But sure, then there are special cases sometimes where you want to move over just some amount of the right channel of your recording to the left - to fix a bad recording or whatever - and in this case there's the tool, where you can narrow down the width of a stereo signal from completely stereo to completely mono, and everything in between. Just decide how "wide" the signal should be and then pan, done. You end up with exactly the same as with two pan knobs for a stereo channel, just the other way round.
Ok, maybe it doesn`t need to be directly on the channel, but it would be a great addition to the tool plugin to be able to seperate the left and right channel and not just working with the stereo width. For the same reason as written above. To be able to place the whole image in a certain point of the mix.dom@bitwig wrote: It is just about what the philosophy behind the different DAWs is. Bitwig Studio follows a kind of semi-modular approach already in version 1.0, even with the modular system being still closed until 2.0. Keeping it simple to grasp on first sight, but giving you all the options really quick if you know what you want to do. Therefore i think the current implementation is pretty good: in most of the cases the pan does what you want it to do, and if you want to do more sophisticated things: the tool is one click away and narrowing down the stereo field to pan it all together is one drag on the tool's width knob. If you compare that to a more complicated pan section that clutters up just any track, even if you don't need it, it is a matter of taste what is better.
I think a DAW focussed more on tracking and studio work, like Cubase, is fine with such a pan section. In a DAW aiming more at creation and sound design, like Bitwig Studio, i like the tool approach more.
Cheers,
Dom
See? That's what i meantSuloo wrote:Hey Dom,
Ok, maybe it doesn`t need to be directly on the channel, but it would be a great addition to the tool plugin to be able to seperate the left and right channel and not just working with the stereo width. For the same reason as written above. To be able to place the whole image in a certain point of the mix.
Also i think the Bitwig way would be to provide a nested FX slot for each channel in the tool plugin, for creative purpose.
cheers
its a balance knob and i would loose information again.dom@bitwig wrote:
There's a pan knob above the width knob in the tool.
Then i get into problems without a panning law.dom@bitwig wrote: And there's the FX layer. Build your own left and right separator, put pans on it, do whatever you want, save as a preset. Done.
Cheers,
Dom
Yes, if you use it alone, not if you build a stereo separator FX layer.Suloo wrote: its a balance knob and i would loose information again.
Not if you set up a stereo separator.Suloo wrote: Then i get into problems without a panning law.


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