I can't listen now because I'm at work. You're getting good reviews!
The two things I'd be concerned with are stereo balance (it should sound centered, with left & right sounding approximately equal in volume). That's easy enough and you might have to do with matched microphones anyway.
And there's a chance that the microphones have opposite polarity ("phase"). Check it in mono. If the bass gets weak in mono or if it just "sounds strange" in mono, try flipping the polarity of one channel and try that in mono. This is unlikely to happen as most mics put-out positive voltage with positive air pressure, but it's not guaranteed. (The absolute polarity isn't critical, but the polarity of the mics should match.)
You have a couple of things going for you... The left & right channels are supposed to sound different, otherwise you wouldn't have stereo. Unless you have an obvious defect in one channel, it's probably OK.
And, with a live recording there is a lot of acoustic mixing of the sound... Both mics are picking-up all of the instruments, just with different intensity and different timing.
Quote:
I didn't even EQ them differently.
|
I wouldn't try matching the sound with EQ unless you hear an obvious problem.
Quote:
Obviously, the performance is not the best. The string section has got some serious intonation issues to solve.
|
You can't fix the "performance".