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Mid-Side Explanations (Part 1)

October 4, 2012 by Jack Menhorn

Last week we featured a post by Rene Cornado about Quad Miking Dual MS.  Well Mychal Herron has a great post on his blog explaining Mid-Side recording:

Well what is Mid-Side? Surprisingly, the M-S technique is one of the oldest stereo recording methods. The theoretical basis for it appears in Alan Blumlein’s seminal 1934 patent, although it wasn’t until the stereo experiments of Danish State Radio engineer Holger Lauridsen in the 1950s that the technology caught up with the theory. Mid-Side which is short for middle side is usually combination of two microphones. A figure eight or bidirectional microphone (Side  channel) with a directional microphone, cardioid, hyper cardioid, super cardioid and even sometimes omni (Mid channel). The microphones sit in a vertical array, one microphone on top of the other and are usually housed within a blimp or some sort of suspension system. This technique splits the center and side information into two channels. When the signal from both microphones is decodedyou can create a multi channel signal. You can read more about how MS works here

I suggest reading this and any future posts on the matter from Mychal. Check out his full post here.

Filed Under: featured Tagged With: history, mid-side, mychal herron, recording

Comments

  1. Brandon Wells says

    October 5, 2012 at 2:17 pm

    Great info and insight to the set and reasoning.

Trackbacks

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    December 4, 2012 at 1:24 pm

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