Originally posted by bestbang4thebuck:
Friendly reminder: while the behavior of the acoustic combination of signals is somewhat different than the combining of electrical signals, mostly due to the effect of an acoustic environment and speaker placement, even if one manages to keep all bass individually isolated in several channels and reproduce them independently, loss and/or boost, similar to electrical combination of signals, will occur in the
I knew somebody would bring up this point, and in fact I was going to cover it in my original post on the subject, but here goes.......
Yes, there is in-room acoustic cancellation to some degree with stereo subwoofers,
but if you read the lengthy post I wrote on the subject of stereo subwoofers, I mentioned that this acoustic mixing in the bass is exactly what happens in real life acousitic events. That's the whole point!
Bass is not mixed to mono and squirted through a single source in real life music heard in real acoustic spaces, but is all around you in random phase. Multiple subwoofers preserve this random phase relationship in the listening room, as picked up by the recording microphones.
When this acoustic mixing of multi-channel (or stereo) bass takes place in the listening room, it is sensed as enhanced performance space ambience due to the
natural acoustic mixing of low frequencies, just as in the original performance space - this does not take place with mono summed bass which only contains peaks and dips with no directional ambience information being conveyed to the listener.
Bass phase interaction in the listening room matters, just like it matters with higher frequencies. Natural acousitic mixing of low frequencies makes recordings sound more
live rather than "canned".
As far as recording engineers keeping bass mostly mono, well, this was a huge issue in the days of LP records which could not tolerate out-of-polarity bass signals in the grooves. This condition would result in vertical modulation of the groove which could cause the stylus to leave the groove and skip to ajacent ones. Great pains were thus taken to record with bass as mono as possible. As a further precaution, all LPs were cut with the bass frequencies below around 300Hz blended to mono before being cut into the master laquer record.
This is not an issue with digital delivery media and bass can be as random phase as any other signal.
In my work on scoring stages where music is recorded (and in studios before that), I know personally that engineers now days give little thought to keeping bass mono. It is just not a concern anymore. In the recording of popular music, bass will tend to be more mono simply because most insturments (including the sole electric bass) are almost always recorded with single microphones, onto single tracks on (increasingly) digital audio workstations.
Recordings (like the organ demo CD I recently circulated) that were recorded with spaced omni-directional microphones contain large amounts of random phase bass information, which contains the low frequency ambience that all real world rooms posess, in addition to the bass directionality from low frequency instruments distributed in different parts of the recording stage (bass drum, contra-bass, timpani, organ pipes etc).
Preserving these low frequency cues in playback in the listening room adds to the sense of hearing a "live" acoustic event.
This dimention is totally lost when bass is summed in purely electronic form and sent to a mono speaker as it is with bass management.