open mind said:
for example if i pan a snare 10% to the right do i need to double it up same snare on 100%left? in other words when do i need doubling it up? maybe in case of more then 50% ????
To clarify about panning: When you have one track and it's a mono track, you will have one spot to put it between two speakers. There is always a relationship between one speaker and the next. So if you put it 40% to the left, then it's still "leaking" a little in the right speaker. (40 to the left is actually 60% left, 40% right when you actually think about how much is going to your speakers... If you had 1% left, that's 1% LESS than what you're putting in the right speaker, which means it's 51% left and 49% right)
Snares usually sound good dead center. But 10% off to the right isn't too much to go crazy about, and it's moderate enough to not really matter. 10% is a good "flavor" to add, moving it over, then placing something right on the other side at 10% to balance it out. And even that's a preference, if you ask me. I say "usually" in the first sentence as a guideline to what EVERYONE ELSE does. Doesn't mean you HAVE to pan that way... it's just what people's ears are used to.
Say you had rhodes keys, a smooth nylon guitar, a hammond b3 organ recorded in stereo with 2 mics with a leslie amp, and one trumpet. If you put them all in the middle, it would be tough to listen to. (You SHOULD get to a point where you know how to mix in mono though... this is very important. Always A-B your mix from mono to stereo to make sure nothing phases out, and everything will still be there, if, say, someone was playing it in a department store with one speaker overhead.) But if you put the hammond wide (100-100 on both tracks) so you can hear the rotating tweeters, put the rhodes say at 40% left, put the nylon at say 60% right, and throw the trumpet right in the middle if it's a good lead instrument. This is just numbers I'm throwin outta my ash hole, but try em. Try different places for everything.
Stereo just means two distinct signals. If you took two of the same exact signal and duplicated them, then put them 100 left, 100 right, it would be the same thing as taking one track and putting it right in the middle, only it would be louder. (Sine waves are additive, and it would just amplify the signal).
True stereo is when they're distinctly different. You would have either two microphones from two different angles, or one microphone recording two different takes of the same thing.
To make something "wide" without having two different signals, sometimes you'd throw it through some reverb, which would be panned hard-left and right, and it would give it depth.
The only way you're going to learn about panning is if you mess with it. Make different mixes with different panning techniques, and then listen back in different systems. Get people's feedback on it. Too much panning will distract your listener. See if that's the case. Find out if what you did was tasteful, or if it was too much.
Hope this little bit helped.