On Thu, Feb 06, 2014 at 04:15:48PM +0000, Dan S wrote: > > My point here is not that the "rule" Fons denies is not an unbreakable > rule but it's an extremely strong convention, empirically demonstrated > in this pop dataset at the least. So yes it's a "rule" in the > colloquial sense, and not just in bass music. I have no idea if the > jump-the-needle argument is plausible or urban myth - I had always > thought it was motivated by perceptual considerations, not by the > medium. I always thought it was because a) low frequencies are hard to localise, so panning them wildly left and right won't really do much and b) most stereos are fairly light on bass so panning low frequencies to the centre ensures that both channels are drive fairly equally giving the greatest sound pressure level possible. I suspect having the bassy sounds far off-centre would be uncomfortable to listen to, because we're so used to having bass and vocals panned to the middle. Experiment, but consider that we do things a conventional way because it works - imagine reading a book where paragraphs alternated between left to right and right to left. -- Gordonjcp MM0YEQ _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user