Great suggestions by rumbleseat!
I have tried several options:
- left channel +db, no help
- playing with phase plugin (this works)
- stereo imaging
- playing with panning
It's about manipulating level and delay. Level adjustment and panning are doing essentially the same thing, with somewhat different routings. EQ is a fine-grained extension of level adjustment by specific frequencies. Phase manipulation and delay are essentially doing the same thing, at least within the range under discussion.
Another technique that may sometimes be useful:
When you want to center the "central stuff" such as vocals without altering the stereo balance off to either side, you might try converting to Mid/Side, make a pan adjustment of the center channel as needed, and convert back to L/R. That's somewhat similar to splitting to stems and panning the vocal as needed as nulldogmas mentions, but will target everything that inhabits the center image rather than just the vox. If a large change is needed and the stereo content off to the sides starts to get shifted too far in the same direction, you can nudge the balance of the Side channel in the opposite way somewhat. Listen closely when doing all this, yet relatively small changes shouldn't be problematic.
Taking a step back and correcting the problem beforehand:
When setting up, close your eyes and listen to the balance as heard from the recording position, ignoring all visual orientation aspects as much as possible. Listen for and identify the direction of the the acoustic center from which the vocals and other centered sources seem to emanate, then rotate the stand so the mic pair faces in that direction. Don't worry if it
looks misaligned, it only maters how it sounds. When recording using a near-spaced pair, doing that corrects level and phase using the mic array itself, and is likely to eliminate the need to make any correction afterward.