Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revision Previous revision | |||
|
proximity_effect [2017/03/24 09:29] mike |
proximity_effect [2017/03/24 09:30] (current) mike |
||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
| The proximity effect is more pronounced on sound sources having more low or low/mid frequencies to start with (e.g. Male Vocals vs Female Vocals). This translates artistically to more bass or power in the vocal. The proximity effect is what makes Barry White sound like Barry White. | The proximity effect is more pronounced on sound sources having more low or low/mid frequencies to start with (e.g. Male Vocals vs Female Vocals). This translates artistically to more bass or power in the vocal. The proximity effect is what makes Barry White sound like Barry White. | ||
| - | In addition to the proximity effect, as the sound source moves closer or further away, the inverse square law [[inverse_square_law|inverse square law]] applies to all frequencies. | + | In addition to the proximity effect, as the sound source moves closer or further away, the [[inverse_square_law|inverse square law]] applies to all frequencies. |
