brew wrote:In reference to Session Documentation #1
http://www.electrical.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=152, why are the ambient floor drum mics delayed? I understand why delay may be used when there are several sources and several mics used at different distances, but a drum kit is essentially a single source. Why not move the ambient mics back 2 feet (effectively a 20ms delay), or, more appropriately, delay all the other mics on the kit so that they align with the ambient mics. What am I missing here?
There are several functions served by delaying the mics.
The ambient microphones receive both a direct signal from the sound source (this is the first arrival of sound at the mic) and a diffused omnidirectional reverberation from the room reflections. The direct signal is acoustically slightly delayed from the close mic signal (as determined by difference in distance from the sound). Notice also that the delay is different for each part of the drum kit, as there is a non-trivial (at audio wavelengths) distance between the hi-hat and the floor tom, for example. These differences create a complex comb-filtering effect which can muddy or hollow-out the sound quality when the two signals (close and far) are added together.
Since sound travels (very roughly) at 1000 feet per second, one foot of distance roughly equals 1 millisecond of delay.
Now imagine a stereo pair of ambient mics on a drum kit at an equilateral distance of 10 feet from the center of the bass drum. The mic on the left side would be only 6 feet from the snare drum, while the ambient mic on the opposite side of the kit would be 12 feet away, but only 8 feet from the rack tom. This creates a mess of overlapping short delays specific to each instrument, and different for the left and right ambient mics.
You proposed delaying the close mics to match the acoustic delay, which might work for a physically small point source and a single ambient microphone, but would entail running the principal signal through a delay unit (which could degrade its sound quality), and would require monitoring and recalibration of the delay whenever climatic conditions changed. This is also ruled-out when using stereo ambient mics, as time differences are inherent in stereo recording, and it is also impractical when using several (many) close mics, as it would be a total pain in the cock.
Much easier is to delay the two ambient mics by a few milliseconds, which moves them out of the haas effect (the delay range where delays affect sound quality and localization rather than being perceived as ambience) and into the range of perceived ambience.
There is a logic to this from acoustic perspective as well. If there is a boundary 20 feet from you, its reflected delay time (from your position) is double the physical distance to the sound source (approximately 40 milliseconds), because the sound has to make a round trip out-and-back. Adding a few milliseconds to the acoustic delay inherent in a room mic seems to mimic this effect, making the ambient sound seem less muddy.
-steve