Panning in Dance Music

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Yuno

Loudness Warrior
Hello friends, this is first thread I've started so we'll see how this goes. I plan mostly to post threads on the topic of the technical/mixing/mastering side. Hopefully we all can learn something.

Anywho, I sometimes feel like I have a huge inferiority complex when it comes to my tracks. I always let my raving, PLURing, EDM-loving friends listen and they say its really good stuff but when I read more and more mixing and mastering manuals I feel like I can do so much more with my mix. I always feel after a song that I didn't spend nearly enough time mixing, probably because I usually mix as I produce meaning the final mixdown is a lot shorter than would be with an actual band handing me unmixed material to work with. To get to my main point, I started noticing some neat tricks with panning while doing my final mixdown through hours and hours of trial error and messing with everything from going completely mono to panning everything hard different ways. Some of this stuff might sound very obvious and others maybe not so much. Anyways, here's a few things I think might be useful to someone:

1. Kicks; never pan them. It's common knowledge that you don't want to pan your anchor so-to-speak. I would even say you should put it pretty narrow in the stereo field but that really is a track to track option.

2. Claps/Snares; very generally do not pan. I personally put them somewhat narrow in the stereo field but widen the reverb on them.

3. Hats; these can seriously vary. Because you can have so many hat items going it's very case by case. If done strategically, you can make it seem like your hats are shifting in the soundfield if you pan a closed hat a bit to one side of an open hat. Sometimes it's necessary to pan hats because of the simple fact that they can get buried in the mix if there's a lot of dense leads on top.

4. Pads; if you have a pad holding down the bass/sub freq range it generally should be put towards the center. Pads can sound wider if panned opposite to a sound with similar freq range and loudness. Whenever panning pads use caution. I can't tell you how many times I feel I am going deaf because of a pad hard panned through the whole track.

5. Basses; in most mixing manuals basses are considered to be a part of the same element as the drums or more specifically the kick drum since they share a similar freq range. Generally basses should be centered. Subbass should always be mono in the stereo field. There's a bit of debate over the wideness of non-subbass basses. What I've found is that if your song is driven by a rolling, grinding, dirty, nasty, or wobbley bassline you could find some benefit from widening where if you have a simple bass holding the track down you might find some use in narrowing.

6. Percussion/loops; these all depend on the role of the perc loop. Currently I'm working on a trance mix of another song I produced and I use a perc loop to hold things together in a breakdown. I kept it narrower in the stereo field and kept it centered. If you have a section of a song where you want your audience to notice your perc/loop I find it best to have it a bit wider.

7. Vocals; there is a lot of things you can do with vocals but generally they should be narrow or mono in the stereo field and almost always be centered. Backing vocals you can get a little more creative with perhaps reverbing into a different speaker, widening, narrowing, automated panning. In regards to panning, it's the little things with vocals and backing vocals that make a track special and give it that emotivness it was missing before.

8. Leads; last and certainly not least. Again this is a good place to get creative. It all depends on your track but if you have a few instruments in your lead element you can spread them out some, panning different synths to different places in the stereo field. If you're working with a single lead instrument it would a good idea to keep it centered and to experiment with widening it.

To conclude and keep my gist here short, there's a few things I think one should remember. First, I will continue to say "track by track," "case by case" because as you already know, there are no hard and fast rules to play by in the field of music. Next, and the primary reason I started this thread was to remind you that PANNING IN DANCE MUSIC SHOULD BE MINIMAL. It should be done only to add a tad of depth or wideness, or make a buried instrument heard if EQing and rearrangement do not work first. If your track is playing in a club, keep in mind that your sound will be distorted a bit already. After your sounds hit the walls and bounce back into the crowd there will already be a slight delay effect in place. When panning or widening you essentially multiply this adverse effect. If you hard pan an element, you may only have half the crowd listening while the other half is left straining to catch something in the gap left where the element should have been.

Hope this helps. Your feedback?
 
Your advices are really good!
Have you ever think about doing POP/dance music? You really have the ear for that, just sayin'. ;)
 
Many thanks! Glad you enjoyed it.

Haha as a matter of fact I'm in a remix competition for "Toes" by Lights. Getting a good dance pop from it too hopefully she likes it :)
 
What i usually do with the clap/snare, i clone it and pan 1 90% right and the other 1 90% left. Then if u for example let the right clap/snare hit around 10miliseconds before the left clap/snare u get a really cool sounding clap/snare.
 
i usually keep my hi-hats in the middle and pan my shakers all the way left/right.

---------- Post added at 06:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:52 PM ----------

nah, basslines can sound very dope with automated panning from left to right.
BassDRUMS should always be in the middle though.
 
What i usually do with the clap/snare, i clone it and pan 1 90% right and the other 1 90% left. Then if u for example let the right clap/snare hit around 10miliseconds before the left clap/snare u get a really cool sounding clap/snare.

Yeah I do something similar sometimes if I want to give my clapsnare more of a stereo effect but I dont want it to be uncentered. I like to pan one clap about 35% to one side, clone it and pan the other 35% to the other. Then I'll take one and either move the pitch a third up or a third down. You can't hear a chord necessarily but it does add a bit of separation and musicality to it.
 
Yeah I do something similar sometimes if I want to give my clapsnare more of a stereo effect but I dont want it to be uncentered. I like to pan one clap about 35% to one side, clone it and pan the other 35% to the other. Then I'll take one and either move the pitch a third up or a third down. You can't hear a chord necessarily but it does add a bit of separation and musicality to it.

Sounds cool, i also use this method on big fat leads duringthe climax in house music so the lead iscoming from left and right simulating its coming from the middle while its accuelly not, by using this method the lead doesnt interfere with the bass drum, cuz ussually even tho the lead is not atthe same frequency as the kick, they suck up eachothers soundwhich isreally annoying butthis seems to stop the suckingpart :p
 
With dance music and most types of popular music it comes down to: if you're going to pan something, have something else balance it out. It's more about percieved 'width' of the mix than stuffing around panning left right and center (no pun intended). That's why there are many different vocal tracks panned all over the place for instance. And it's also why plugins that give percieved stereo enhancement to mono signals get used so much. You also have to consider mono-compatibility, though.
 
With dance music and most types of popular music it comes down to: if you're going to pan something, have something else balance it out. It's more about percieved 'width' of the mix than stuffing around panning left right and center (no pun intended). That's why there are many different vocal tracks panned all over the place for instance. And it's also why plugins that give percieved stereo enhancement to mono signals get used so much. You also have to consider mono-compatibility, though.

that's very true. Pop and Dance mixes are very different from Rock mixes. If you listen to say a Green Day album (sorry it was the closest thing on my desk) you'll notice alot of the cymbals and even some guitar layers are almost hard panned every which way. In Pop and Dance it's not so much true panning that's needed, it's just as you said, the "percieved width."

And also as you said mono-compatibility is a must. Some house parties that DJ's would play your tracks at might only have one speaker or something. In any case mixing in mono for me makes things waaaaaaaayyyy easier. Some people don't agree but I do alot of my mixing in mono.
 
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