At what point to apply mid-side processing?

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Billy86
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2017/02/25 17:52:05 (permalink)

At what point to apply mid-side processing?

Do this during mix down through sends to a bus, or is this a mastering technique?

Have heard what it can do and would love to learn how to do it.
Thanks!

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    telecharge
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/25 18:28:32 (permalink)
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    gcolbert
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/25 19:26:51 (permalink)
    You have to capture a mid track and a side track when recording.  Basically two microphones pointed 90 degrees apart.  Did you do this or are you trying to apply something after the fact?
     
     
     

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    #3
    Billy86
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/25 21:25:42 (permalink)
    Cool. Thanks. I'll check it out!

    Windows 10 x64 on a Dell/Intel i5, 500 Gig SSD, 32 gig RAM, Focusrite Scarlett 2i4, Sonar Professional, Melodyne 4 Assistant, Kurzweil SP-76 stage piano, Baldwin RP 100 digital upright, Novation Impulse 25, Breedlove Pursuit Concert Acous/Elec, Fender American Standard Tele, Fender G-DEC 30 modeling amp, Sigma DM-5 Acoustic, Ovation MCS148 Celebrity Acous/Elec. Mandolin, Roland V-Drums TD-11KV, AKG P220, Yamaha MG82CX mixer, KRK Rokit 6 Powered Monitors, PreSonus FaderPort
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    Billy86
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/25 21:26:28 (permalink)
    gcolbert
    You have to capture a mid track and a side track when recording.  Basically two microphones pointed 90 degrees apart.  Did you do this or are you trying to apply something after the fact?
     
     
     


    After.

    Windows 10 x64 on a Dell/Intel i5, 500 Gig SSD, 32 gig RAM, Focusrite Scarlett 2i4, Sonar Professional, Melodyne 4 Assistant, Kurzweil SP-76 stage piano, Baldwin RP 100 digital upright, Novation Impulse 25, Breedlove Pursuit Concert Acous/Elec, Fender American Standard Tele, Fender G-DEC 30 modeling amp, Sigma DM-5 Acoustic, Ovation MCS148 Celebrity Acous/Elec. Mandolin, Roland V-Drums TD-11KV, AKG P220, Yamaha MG82CX mixer, KRK Rokit 6 Powered Monitors, PreSonus FaderPort
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    quantumeffect
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/26 08:02:13 (permalink)
    Billy86
    gcolbert
    You have to capture a mid track and a side track when recording.  Basically two microphones pointed 90 degrees apart.  Did you do this or are you trying to apply something after the fact?
     
     
     


    After.


    If you want to process material using M-S processing but the material was not recorded using the M-S mic'ing technique, what you will be doing is "encoding" a stereo track, processing the M-S information and then "decoding" it again to play back in stereo.
     
    ... because you are starting with and processing a stereo track (not a bunch of mono tracks) it is a technique that lends itself to the mastering stage.
     
    You can do it by setting up your own matrix of tracks and busses (3 tracks, 5 busses and a master ... with 1 track containing the original stereo source) or by using plugins to do it for you.
     

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    #6
    tclbrown
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/26 09:44:51 (permalink)
    This is what I like about this forum - a good question and really helpful replies.  I have already printed off the posted articles to walk through myself.
    #7
    Billy86
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/26 10:36:40 (permalink)
    quantumeffect
    Billy86
    gcolbert
    You have to capture a mid track and a side track when recording.  Basically two microphones pointed 90 degrees apart.  Did you do this or are you trying to apply something after the fact?





    After.


    If you want to process material using M-S processing but the material was not recorded using the M-S mic'ing technique, what you will be doing is "encoding" a stereo track, processing the M-S information and then "decoding" it again to play back in stereo.
     
    ... because you are starting with and processing a stereo track (not a bunch of mono tracks) it is a technique that lends itself to the mastering stage.
     
    You can do it by setting up your own matrix of tracks and busses (3 tracks, 5 busses and a master ... with 1 track containing the original stereo source) or by using plugins to do it for you.
     


    Thanks. I'd read about the encoder/decoder route (Voxengo offers a free one I'm going to explore). I just didn't have a mental model on how M/S worked or how to approach.

    Windows 10 x64 on a Dell/Intel i5, 500 Gig SSD, 32 gig RAM, Focusrite Scarlett 2i4, Sonar Professional, Melodyne 4 Assistant, Kurzweil SP-76 stage piano, Baldwin RP 100 digital upright, Novation Impulse 25, Breedlove Pursuit Concert Acous/Elec, Fender American Standard Tele, Fender G-DEC 30 modeling amp, Sigma DM-5 Acoustic, Ovation MCS148 Celebrity Acous/Elec. Mandolin, Roland V-Drums TD-11KV, AKG P220, Yamaha MG82CX mixer, KRK Rokit 6 Powered Monitors, PreSonus FaderPort
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    gswitz
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/26 10:56:46 (permalink)
    Be cautioned that m/s gets used to describe two things...

    First and most classically is a mic'ing technique that enables the ambient track to cancel completely from the sound when played on a mono system. This was most important when more than half of all listeners listened in mono. It is still commonly used and should be learned so you know it is a choice to be considered. This requires a figure eight patterned Mic and another.

    The other meaning is for things like the lp EQ. Really, this is a goofy term for what is happening. People often don't realize how much it can help a mix to bring up the opposite channel, phase inverted, in the one channel and vice versa. Doing this with EQ can help reduce center volume and emphasize the differences in the tracks. This is usually done in the mastering stage.

    These two things have very little to do with each other, but both result in polarity inverted material in opposing stereo tracks.

    This means that both have significant canceling when played on a mono system.

    Lastly, for the first type, no plugin is required. It is just a routing solution.

    StudioCat > I use Windows 10 and Sonar Platinum. I have a touch screen.
    I make some videos. This one shows how to do a physical loopback on the RME UCX to get many more equalizer nodes.
    #9
    Billy86
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/26 23:26:51 (permalink)
    gswitz
    Be cautioned that m/s gets used to describe two things...

    First and most classically is a mic'ing technique that enables the ambient track to cancel completely from the sound when played on a mono system. This was most important when more than half of all listeners listened in mono. It is still commonly used and should be learned so you know it is a choice to be considered. This requires a figure eight patterned Mic and another.

    The other meaning is for things like the lp EQ. Really, this is a goofy term for what is happening. People often don't realize how much it can help a mix to bring up the opposite channel, phase inverted, in the one channel and vice versa. Doing this with EQ can help reduce center volume and emphasize the differences in the tracks. This is usually done in the mastering stage.

    These two things have very little to do with each other, but both result in polarity inverted material in opposing stereo tracks.

    This means that both have significant canceling when played on a mono system.

    Lastly, for the first type, no plugin is required. It is just a routing solution.


    I'm afraid I don't understand the routing in a DIY scenario and I'm unclear on the phase issue, overall. I'm going to try a Waves Hybrid EQ that supports M/S processing with control over phase. How do you I approach that? Thanks so much.

    Windows 10 x64 on a Dell/Intel i5, 500 Gig SSD, 32 gig RAM, Focusrite Scarlett 2i4, Sonar Professional, Melodyne 4 Assistant, Kurzweil SP-76 stage piano, Baldwin RP 100 digital upright, Novation Impulse 25, Breedlove Pursuit Concert Acous/Elec, Fender American Standard Tele, Fender G-DEC 30 modeling amp, Sigma DM-5 Acoustic, Ovation MCS148 Celebrity Acous/Elec. Mandolin, Roland V-Drums TD-11KV, AKG P220, Yamaha MG82CX mixer, KRK Rokit 6 Powered Monitors, PreSonus FaderPort
    #10
    Rob[at]Sound-Rehab
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/27 02:14:33 (permalink)
    Billy86
    I'm afraid I don't understand the routing in a DIY scenario and I'm unclear on the phase issue, overall. I'm going to try a Waves Hybrid EQ that supports M/S processing with control over phase. How do you I approach that? Thanks so much.



    it's actually fairly simple these days as many plugins (WAVES, FabFilter, etc.) do that for you i.e. the decode your stereo signal into mid/side components (M-S), do the processing and convert back to stereo, all within the plugin itself i.e. you simply insert the plugin and click the M-S button and now instead of EQing left and right, you EQ center vs sides.
     
    I do this very often to clear out the center where most of the overlaps happen (e.g. wide pads that should be wide and not mask anything in the center, I carefully EQ M-S style) ... but the same applies for side-chained compression where you could e.g. bring down the M part of the guitar whenever the vocals kick in while keeping the sides untouched.

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    #11
    gswitz
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/27 22:46:55 (permalink)
    Idk. It is tricky. Maybe I'm not creative enough in my thinking.

    A stereo track is basically two mono tracks. When you raise the volume of one, phase inverted, in the other and vice versa, you will quiet the material that is shared between the tracks. The phase inverted material could be eq'd first.

    I believe, but don't know, that this is what you are doing when you cut center mids during the vocal. This means that non centered mids from the other track probably show up, phase inverted in the same number of dB as the cut.

    It is goofy. Maybe there is a better way to do this math. I'm probably underestimating the good people at cakewalk.

    I'm suspicious of magic. I shouldn't be. There really are little wizard boys running around saving the world.

    And spreading some phase inverted material between the channels can sound kinda cool.

    It would be awesome if there was a center track, and a left and a right and that's how EQ was applied.

    If I'm missing the way to sum two tracks to end up with only the center material, I'd love to learn how. Anyone?

    StudioCat > I use Windows 10 and Sonar Platinum. I have a touch screen.
    I make some videos. This one shows how to do a physical loopback on the RME UCX to get many more equalizer nodes.
    #12
    mudgel
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/27 23:26:47 (permalink)
    "A stereo track" is not a pair of mono tracks. Stereo is in a sense greater than the sum of its parts.

    You can out a pair of mono tracks together all day long and won't end up with a stereo image.

    If a take a mono guitar track and place it L and take another guitar track and place it R that does not a stereo track make.

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    #13
    Jeff Evans
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/02/28 23:10:54 (permalink)
    But a pair of mono tracks however can be used to capture a stereo image e.g. from a stereo microphone or a pair of microphones (in a stereo configuration) or even a stereo synth output. A la the way Pro Tools does it. This can be useful because you can then pan each mono track (or L and R) to any position.
     
    Stereo tracks though (or interleaved) are still easier to handle for most signals like this because you are only dealing with one thing as opposed to two.
     
    Mid Side processing is interesting and useful if you want to treat the Mid and Sides component as separate identities and then after converting back to stereo it is possible to affect the centre or the outside (extreme L and R) sounds differently.
     
    It saved my butt once in mastering. I was given a stereo recording a piano in a hall and it was just too roomy. Piano sounded too far away. After converting to M and S and turning the S component right down most of that room sound disappeared and the piano sounded much closer. Amazing in fact. Even through the end result was mono by applying some slight reverb of a much smaller room it was possible to massage it into a pretty decent result overall. i.e. a close piano sound with just a hint of room behind it. And that reverb was just enough to add some slight stereo imaging back into the close sound too.
     
    M/S recording too is very cool. e.g. using a M/S configuration to make a stereo recording of an acoustic sound. The ability to manipulate the stereo width after the fact can sometimes be very useful indeed.

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    #14
    Billy86
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    Re: At what point to apply mid-side processing? 2017/03/03 12:58:47 (permalink)
    Thank you everyone! I'm going to see what I can do with M/S. Pretty cool to explore.

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