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Making a Scene Presents - Panning Strategies: Creating Width Without Losing Focus
Panning is one of the most powerful tools in mixing, but it is also one of the easiest to treat like an afterthought. A lot of indie artists open a mix, throw the vocal in the middle, push a guitar left, push another guitar right, maybe slide a hi-hat somewhere off to the side, and call it a stereo image. That is not really panning. That is decorating. Real panning is arrangement, storytelling, and space management. It decides where the listener’s attention goes. It decides whether a mix feels wide and exciting or blurry and disconnected. It can make a small home studio recording feel like a real record, not because it magically fixes bad tracks, but because it helps every part of the song find a job and a place to stand.
http://www.makingascene.org
By Richard LHommedieu1
11 ratings
Making a Scene Presents - Panning Strategies: Creating Width Without Losing Focus
Panning is one of the most powerful tools in mixing, but it is also one of the easiest to treat like an afterthought. A lot of indie artists open a mix, throw the vocal in the middle, push a guitar left, push another guitar right, maybe slide a hi-hat somewhere off to the side, and call it a stereo image. That is not really panning. That is decorating. Real panning is arrangement, storytelling, and space management. It decides where the listener’s attention goes. It decides whether a mix feels wide and exciting or blurry and disconnected. It can make a small home studio recording feel like a real record, not because it magically fixes bad tracks, but because it helps every part of the song find a job and a place to stand.
http://www.makingascene.org

14,543 Listeners