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<blockquote data-quote="n2audio" data-source="post: 158872" data-attributes="member: 540940"><p>No no no no no...you don't want to do that. L/R stereo seperation is crucial to get any kind of decent sound. Recordings aren't made in a front/rear relationship - that signal is always the same - and is the reason many people don't even use rear speakers. The idea of stereo sound is that you can have one thing going on in the left channel (instrumental for instance) and have a completely different thing going on in the right (vocals), and it all comes together in the middle. Effects are made using L to R stereo seperation and switching it to F/R would be a BAD idea.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="n2audio, post: 158872, member: 540940"] No no no no no...you don't want to do that. L/R stereo seperation is crucial to get any kind of decent sound. Recordings aren't made in a front/rear relationship - that signal is always the same - and is the reason many people don't even use rear speakers. The idea of stereo sound is that you can have one thing going on in the left channel (instrumental for instance) and have a completely different thing going on in the right (vocals), and it all comes together in the middle. Effects are made using L to R stereo seperation and switching it to F/R would be a BAD idea. [/QUOTE]
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