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Welcome to the Recording Forums archive of audio recording posts from the old Recording Website Message Board


Home recording and general music post from the archived Yabb Recording Website Message Board. Some of the info here may be outdated but many of the audio recording and home studio tips are still good. Note: The only tags I made and attempt to convert are italics, bold, center and underline. So if you see some gibberish surrounded by brackets, just ignore it.


Recording Website Archived Yabb board Post


Febuary 2001 Yabb Message Board Archive
Subject: binaural report
by Steve   |   05/09/01 at 02:02:52

I am a student at Full Sail University in Winter Park, Fl.  It is a multimedia school and I am audio recording major.  I am writing a report on binaural micing techniques and the history.  I was wondering if you have any information on these issues or know where the best place to research this topic would be.  Any information you could devulge would be most appreciated.  Thank you for your time.

Yours,

Steve Winders


Subject: Re: binaural report
by BananaHead   |   05/09/01 at 11:31:08

The idea of binaural (two ears) recording is about as purist-naturalist as you can get.  Music happens in a room, the instruments bounce around and mix themselves together in a room, some of this sound enters a human's ears who is standing at a single places in the room.  

Binaural recording attempts to capture exactly what this person would hear at this position in the room by building a dummy head complete with torso, facial features, realistic ears, maybe a hat, whatever... and building microphones into the openings of the ear canals.  Dummy's left ear goes to left speaker, right ear goes to right speaker.  You can also use mount tiny condenser mics in your own head and stand fairly still.  

Sennheiser MKE2002 system is for micing you own head.  Neumann and B&K make dummy heads.

Headphones are the preferred method of playback obviously.  The goal is to reproduce the sound that occurred at the dummy's canal at YOUR ear canal.  

Subject: Re: binaural report
by Slider   |   05/09/01 at 21:01:23

Hey Steve.  I'm an ex-full sail student myself so I would be glad to help.  I looked up binaural recording on the net and found a few URLs.  

http://www.fivehorizons.com/feature/binaural.html

http://www.binaural.com/I hope these help.  By the way...what class is this for?  Just curious.  Good luck.