![]() It’s a very forgiving technique perfect for someone like me, who is both performer and their own sound engineer. To give me a lovely stereo effect with limited phasing issues, I’ve decided to use a mic’ing technique known as mid/side mic’ing. I’m taking advantage of the Christmas holidays to practice recording acoustic guitar. Watch this video to see and hear it in action: When they are “out of phase”, the positive peaks of one signal are being (partially) cancelled out by the negative peaks from another signal. When audio signals are “in phase”, the positives and the negatives are roughly rising and falling together, creating a stronger / louder signal. As you start to combine two or more signals together, though, these positives and negatives start to interact. When you’re dealing with just one audio signal, this normally isn’t important. An audio waveform switches from positive to negative and back again all the time. What Is “The Phase Of A Track”?Īny audio signal has two aspects: the positive signal, and the negative signal. Those are costs / consequences that you might find too expensive. Unfortunately, these plugins consume precious DSP CPU, and they colour the sound too. The workaround is to use two additional plugins that support phase inverting on your side tracks. This is a really basic feature, and it’s surprising that it is missing from LUNA. At the time of writing, LUNA can only flip the phase of a track while the track is being recorded. I’m recording into Universal Audio’s LUNA DAW. ![]() For this to work, I need to be able to flip the phase of a track after it has been recorded and copied. I’m learning to record my acoustic guitar using the mid/side technique. I went into my current DAW – Universal Audio’s LUNA – to do something so basic, I took it for granted.
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