7 Pro Tips to Optimize Audio with MStereoProcessor
1. Start with a clean source
- Clarity: Remove unwanted noise, clicks, and pops before processing.
- Action: Use noise reduction, high-pass filtering to cut subsonic rumble, and manual editing for transient noise.
2. Understand mid/side balance
- Clarity: MStereoProcessor splits stereo into mid (mono) and side (stereo) components.
- Action: Solo mid and side to hear differences; adjust levels so the center elements (vocals, bass) remain solid while width comes from sides.
3. Use subtle widening
- Clarity: Excessive widening causes phase issues and mono compatibility problems.
- Action: Apply small increases to side level or stereo spread; A/B test in mono to ensure important elements don’t vanish.
4. EQ separately for mid and side
- Clarity: Mid often needs low-end focus; sides benefit from presence and air.
- Action: Cut lows on sides (e.g., below 100–150 Hz) to tighten the low end; boost gentle highs on sides for sparkle; address muddiness in mid with targeted cuts.
5. Apply compression judiciously
- Clarity: Compressing mid and side independently preserves punch and spatial cues.
- Action: Use slower attack on mid to keep transients, faster on sides for glue; match makeup gain to maintain balance.
6. Check phase and mono compatibility
- Clarity: Processing can introduce phase shifts that collapse in mono.
- Action: Regularly switch to mono while adjusting; use phase correlation meters and undo or reduce settings that produce large negative correlation.
7. Automate changes across the track
- Clarity: Static MS settings may not suit all sections (verse vs. chorus).
- Action: Automate mid/side levels, width, or EQ to enhance dynamics—narrow for dense verses, widen for open choruses.
Bonus workflow tips:
- Always A/B between processed and unprocessed audio.
- Save presets for reference points, and document settings you like for different genres.
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