This question may be so simple even a caveman could answer it - but I'm stumped! I did my due diligence with a search; I couldn't find anything related to my question.
I am a musician (I play electric bass) and I am trying to follow along with my instructor's lessons, in mp3 format. I have them loaded into my mp3 player, listening with a nice set of headphones. I realized that the lessons were mixed in the studio with the spoken vocal lesson in the left channel and the instructor's electric bass in the right channel. So essentially, the mp3's are mixed stereo even though all it is, is spoken word and electric bass.
My problem is that I am deaf in my left ear (born that way) so I can't hear anything coming out of the left headphone cup.
MY QUESTION: Is there a way I can rig some kind of adapter that will sum the left and right channels into a single monaural channel? That way I could hear all the material out of my good ear.
Before you ask, I know I could just use a boom box, but I prefer to use headphones - it just works better for me that way.
Thanks in advance,
...Doug
I am a musician (I play electric bass) and I am trying to follow along with my instructor's lessons, in mp3 format. I have them loaded into my mp3 player, listening with a nice set of headphones. I realized that the lessons were mixed in the studio with the spoken vocal lesson in the left channel and the instructor's electric bass in the right channel. So essentially, the mp3's are mixed stereo even though all it is, is spoken word and electric bass.
My problem is that I am deaf in my left ear (born that way) so I can't hear anything coming out of the left headphone cup.
MY QUESTION: Is there a way I can rig some kind of adapter that will sum the left and right channels into a single monaural channel? That way I could hear all the material out of my good ear.
Before you ask, I know I could just use a boom box, but I prefer to use headphones - it just works better for me that way.
Thanks in advance,
...Doug
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