
Originally Written by
Graham_Start
The second and much more common problem is that anything which is panned in the middle will be boosted compared to anything panned hard left or right when the channels are folded-down. On a typical 60s wide stereo recording, you'd have for example the vocals in the centre, the guitars hard left, and the keyboards on the right. When you fold that down to mono, the vocals become twice as loud as the instruments, and the whole mix is off. This is very evident if you look at some of the youtube clips people have posted where the audio was originally wide stereo, but youtube folds down to mono. Some of them become near-acapellas, like the Petula Clark clip that I found the other day. This is one of the main reasons why back then, they did separate mixes for mono and not just fold-downs. Today it isn't necessary, both because there's very little that is mixed in "wide stereo", and of course mono playback is now the exception and no longer the rule.
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