Just wondering if anyone else out there has ever experienced confusion / disorientation as the result of phase shifted stereo musical signals. I've experienced this a few times, when running two different phase shifted signals out to separate amps. If you get caught between them and if the signals are shifted just right, the result can be very disorienting.
The first time that it happened to me was back in the late 70s. I was onstage playing bass, and our guitarist turned on his brand new mutron biphase while he was playing Grant Geissman's guitar solo from "Feels So Good." The experience is hard to explain ... He had evidently spent a lot of time experimenting with the BiPhase, as he brought two amps that night... just to mess with the rest of us on stage.
I couldn't explain what happened, but I found myself standing still on the stage between those two amps, barely able to play, and barely able to remain standing. That wash of sound out of the stereo phasors just crippled me. It was as if I was brain-dead. It took me a little while to collect myself.
Has anyone else had an experience like this? When its done properly, shifted signals like this really screw with your senses. I'm surprised that you don't hear signals like this more often in recordings, just for their dramatic effect.
The first time that it happened to me was back in the late 70s. I was onstage playing bass, and our guitarist turned on his brand new mutron biphase while he was playing Grant Geissman's guitar solo from "Feels So Good." The experience is hard to explain ... He had evidently spent a lot of time experimenting with the BiPhase, as he brought two amps that night... just to mess with the rest of us on stage.
I couldn't explain what happened, but I found myself standing still on the stage between those two amps, barely able to play, and barely able to remain standing. That wash of sound out of the stereo phasors just crippled me. It was as if I was brain-dead. It took me a little while to collect myself.
Has anyone else had an experience like this? When its done properly, shifted signals like this really screw with your senses. I'm surprised that you don't hear signals like this more often in recordings, just for their dramatic effect.
Comment