You have to put Metric AB AFTER your final limiter if you want to do A/B comparison against references, otherwise the reference tracks will be limited again on top of their own limiting.
Thanks for chiming in 😃 What you suggest will make the bass wider for sure, maybe cleaner, but definitely..less mono compatible! 😅 Try this: 1. open a serum with the init patch. 2. put a Utility after it 3. compare switching on/off the utility 'Mono' button while playing some notes (you should hear no difference) 4. now add more voices to the init patch (e.g UNISON=2) 5. repeat step 3.. Mono-ing a patch with more than one voice (unison > 1) changes the sound dramatically, meaning that your bass will sound very different when played in stereo or mono. I find it easy to make things wide, the difficult part for me is to make them wide AND mono compatible (same sound character and similar intensity when switching from mono to stereo) like the pros do :) (Also the procedure you suggest is Serum-specific while with the reverb can be applied to any audio source e.g. a recorded external mono synth)
😎
Thank you kind sir. Have a blessed day 🙏
Thank you mate :)
You have to put Metric AB AFTER your final limiter if you want to do A/B comparison against references, otherwise the reference tracks will be limited again on top of their own limiting.
@@amg5656 Of course, that’s exactly how it is in the video ;) check 0:54
just use the unison knob and get it wider than you have now and more clean!!
Thanks for chiming in 😃
What you suggest will make the bass wider for sure, maybe cleaner, but definitely..less mono compatible! 😅
Try this:
1. open a serum with the init patch.
2. put a Utility after it
3. compare switching on/off the utility 'Mono' button while playing some notes (you should hear no difference)
4. now add more voices to the init patch (e.g UNISON=2)
5. repeat step 3..
Mono-ing a patch with more than one voice (unison > 1) changes the sound dramatically, meaning that your bass will sound very different when played in stereo or mono.
I find it easy to make things wide, the difficult part for me is to make them wide AND mono compatible (same sound character and similar intensity when switching from mono to stereo) like the pros do :)
(Also the procedure you suggest is Serum-specific while with the reverb can be applied to any audio source e.g. a recorded external mono synth)
So we can tell who cuts to vinyl and who ignores that medium
😊
ruclips.net/video/08GoSM_JOIw/видео.html is also a bonkers example of low frequencies all over the place where you'd least expect them.