Quote:
Originally Posted by sxesven
Oh wow! I'm not an audiophile but I imagine that would be quite the listening experience. I wonder how this is done, is it just a matter of the audio signal being divided into different frequencies or something? Or are the original recordings used to split the signal?
|
It's like surrounding sound but in a 3D space. That is when you turn your head around (if you have the compatible tech like AirPods) the different sounds (from the original track layers, which are previously placed in a 3D scene) remains at the same place. Like you are physically in the center of the playing music. When your head goes in the opposite direction of the established spacial source of the sound, the sound is lowering.
I only tried the auto conversion of some of my musics into this form (via iOS Bluetooth settings). It was fun but not really worthy from my point of view. I disabled it really quick because it also kinda kills the original mastering.
I'm eager to know if that effort on her previous tracks will have a much more different result than the basic auto conversion.