We're in the Meldaproduction forum, so it's expected and welcome to point out how something can be done with the host's products. Thanks for the tip on the EQ nodes! This may be an addition to my bag of M/S tricks.Held wrote: Sun Jan 30, 2022 12:43 pm
If you put a Melda EQ in M+S mode, you can choose for each node if it affects Mid, Side, or Mid+Side (right click the node to get the advanced options).
That sounds very similar to the Mid/Side and Panorama crossovers in MB plugins.Starship Krupa wrote: Sun Jan 30, 2022 4:19 am Other T-Racks units have it so that within one instance, when they're unlinked you switch back and forth between identical Mid and Side (or left and right) screens, and that works pretty well, too and saves some real estate.
I'm not trying to convince you to use more Melda plugins, but your previous post sounded like you were interested in using them on your mastering chain, so I showed you an option of how to do it. But yeah, you're going to have to invest some time to take full advantage of Melda, and if that investment doesn't seem worth it, there's nothing wrong with sticking to what you know.
I just don't yet feel comfortable with the MB interface paradigm. I do have Unfiltered Audio TRIAD, which is the MB version of their BYOME, which I really like. I got my feet wet messing around with its MB features, which are similar to the way Meldaproduction presents it.
Actually, the first time I was exposed to the things you can do with M/S processing was in the Meldaproduction documentation, Vojtech's explanation of how to apply it is excellent. It didn't really stick until I got the T-Racks 670 and set it to a stereo enhancement preset. That's when the lightbulb went off and it started to make sense. I love the effect that compressing the mid more than the side can have. Either by threshold, ratio, or release time.
Sometimes the deep dive into a Meldaproduction effect is worth it; I get faster results with MRhythmizer than I do with Stutter Edit 2, which requires its own deep diving to get a handle on. I took a Producertech course on Stutter Edit and applied that learning to MRhythmizer Sometimes (as in this case), I have other excellent tools that slot right in with all the controls front-facing.
