mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Moderators: Acoustica Eric, rsaintjohn
mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
When to use the mono version of a plug-in vs the stereo version?
for eg. waves plug-ins come in the mono version and stereo.
also when to use VST3 vs VST?
Should vocal tracks use mono or stereo version of plug-ins?
Thank you
for eg. waves plug-ins come in the mono version and stereo.
also when to use VST3 vs VST?
Should vocal tracks use mono or stereo version of plug-ins?
Thank you
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Try and match your signal input. Most vocals are coming in mono. Most non synthetic instruments are coming in mono. A synthesizer or eletric keyboard is probably coming in stereo. Most virtual synths are output in stereo.
You'll have to match it according to you desired result and also taking into account the original signal.
VST is tried and true - most of the time VST will "just work." VST3 works but there are still issues in the development. So many VST3s are just conversions from VST and it seems developers take shortcuts and miss things that prevent the VST3 from being universally usable. They can be buggy more often than VST in my experience.
I've heard there are a lot of new options and advantages with VST3 but I don't program them and only know their behavior through use.
You'll have to match it according to you desired result and also taking into account the original signal.
VST is tried and true - most of the time VST will "just work." VST3 works but there are still issues in the development. So many VST3s are just conversions from VST and it seems developers take shortcuts and miss things that prevent the VST3 from being universally usable. They can be buggy more often than VST in my experience.
I've heard there are a lot of new options and advantages with VST3 but I don't program them and only know their behavior through use.
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
awesome! ty - since posting I figured out the signal matching. Now I'll stick to VST versions of plugins if possible.
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
good to know C-H.cactus-head wrote: ↑Wed Aug 02, 2023 10:43 am Try and match your signal input. Most vocals are coming in mono. Most non synthetic instruments are coming in mono. A synthesizer or eletric keyboard is probably coming in stereo. Most virtual synths are output in stereo.
You'll have to match it according to you desired result and also taking into account the original signal.
VST is tried and true - most of the time VST will "just work." VST3 works but there are still issues in the development. So many VST3s are just conversions from VST and it seems developers take shortcuts and miss things that prevent the VST3 from being universally usable. They can be buggy more often than VST in my experience.
I've heard there are a lot of new options and advantages with VST3 but I don't program them and only know their behavior through use.
I'm on a big learning curve and to know what will JUST work is what I need for me.
I have always been on the trailing end of technology as opposed to cutting edge because trailing has bugs worked out.
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Dell XPS i7-10700 2.9Ghz
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Me too. And my statement is really opinion - so I'm no authority on VST2 vs VST3.hpharley90 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 29, 2023 12:41 pm I have always been on the trailing end of technology as opposed to cutting edge because trailing has bugs worked out.
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Sums it up for me. VST3 really buys 99.99% of all music makers nothing. f Steinberg. Something new for the sake of something new. I avoid VST3 like the plague.cactus-head wrote: ↑Wed Aug 02, 2023 10:43 am Try and match your signal input. Most vocals are coming in mono. Most non synthetic instruments are coming in mono. A synthesizer or eletric keyboard is probably coming in stereo. Most virtual synths are output in stereo.
You'll have to match it according to you desired result and also taking into account the original signal.
VST is tried and true - most of the time VST will "just work." VST3 works but there are still issues in the development. So many VST3s are just conversions from VST and it seems developers take shortcuts and miss things that prevent the VST3 from being universally usable. They can be buggy more often than VST in my experience.
I've heard there are a lot of new options and advantages with VST3 but I don't program them and only know their behavior through use.
Mono vs stereo is mostly as stated above but it's all personal pref. I'd try both and see what works. I mostly want mono, even with synths, but that's me
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
I have a questions about this. Let's say I record vocals in mono (with a single cable in either the left or right channel in your audio interface). So the result is the vocals are playing out of both left and right channels evenly. I would use a mono plugin for that right? But let's say I add some panning on the vocal track in areas. Is it now considered stereo? Should I then use the stereo versions of my plugins, such as compressors?
Thanks
Thanks
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Hi,
It's not a stereo signal that has spacial depth and crossover between channels. A true stereo signal would have ambience bleed between channels that would be captured based on the position of the sound source relative to the mic. Two mics would capture a stereo signal with spacial and positional relevance. You're only getting one input with a single channel and mic or DI so even if the final playback output of the recorded mono signal is coming out of both left and right channels, it is still a single directional source in the world. Again, the effects you use only matter to you and the sound you want to get.
A shorter answer: you can use whatever you want - stereo or mono effects. It depends on what sound you want in the end. A stereo effect will often add "widening" or ambience to a digital sound to give it perceived space or dimension. In the case of your mono track going into a stereo plugin, the output is still going to be two channels but the origin from the mono track on each channel going into the effect will be the same (unless you pan it before going into the effect). Often guitar or vocals will be recorded multiple times on mono tracks. They will then be panned left and right to double or triple the fullness of the sound. This will then be run through stereo effects to add dimension and space. There's no right or wrong. Go for the sound you want. There's so much flexibility in digital recording. Stereo effects might let you have different settings for each channel under the assumption that they are going in a little different from each other as true stereo. A mono effect might handle the whole signal uniformly.
Interesting question. The audio file created from the recording will be mono but you can shift the signal volume from left to right with panning. There is still output going to the left and right audio outputs of your system and switching the volume balance from left to right will still function to that output - but the file is still mono. So hitting left and right channels simultaneously doesn't mean it's "true stereo" in the sense of spacial dimension. And it ultimately has nothing to do with whatever effect you want to use - unless you want to keep it's sense of spacial dimension (or lack of) the same.But let's say I add some panning on the vocal track in areas. Is it now considered stereo? Should I then use the stereo versions of my plugins, such as compressors?
It's not a stereo signal that has spacial depth and crossover between channels. A true stereo signal would have ambience bleed between channels that would be captured based on the position of the sound source relative to the mic. Two mics would capture a stereo signal with spacial and positional relevance. You're only getting one input with a single channel and mic or DI so even if the final playback output of the recorded mono signal is coming out of both left and right channels, it is still a single directional source in the world. Again, the effects you use only matter to you and the sound you want to get.
A shorter answer: you can use whatever you want - stereo or mono effects. It depends on what sound you want in the end. A stereo effect will often add "widening" or ambience to a digital sound to give it perceived space or dimension. In the case of your mono track going into a stereo plugin, the output is still going to be two channels but the origin from the mono track on each channel going into the effect will be the same (unless you pan it before going into the effect). Often guitar or vocals will be recorded multiple times on mono tracks. They will then be panned left and right to double or triple the fullness of the sound. This will then be run through stereo effects to add dimension and space. There's no right or wrong. Go for the sound you want. There's so much flexibility in digital recording. Stereo effects might let you have different settings for each channel under the assumption that they are going in a little different from each other as true stereo. A mono effect might handle the whole signal uniformly.
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Thanks for your great insights cactus-head!
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
When I tried using a mono version of a Waves plugin on an acoustic guitar that was recorded in mono, I could not pan the audio of the track in Mixcraft. You need to use the stereo version of the plugin in order to pan.
- Acoustica Greg
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Hi,
When you recorded the guitar, did you arm the track on the left? If the track was armed for Stereo, and the audio was actually in the left or right channel, then you would have a stereo file with no audio in one channel and that won't pan as you expect.
To get around this, you could right-click on the recording and select Properties, and then set the clip to the channel that has the audio: right or left. (Most commonly Input 1 is on the left).
Greg
When you recorded the guitar, did you arm the track on the left? If the track was armed for Stereo, and the audio was actually in the left or right channel, then you would have a stereo file with no audio in one channel and that won't pan as you expect.
To get around this, you could right-click on the recording and select Properties, and then set the clip to the channel that has the audio: right or left. (Most commonly Input 1 is on the left).
Greg
Mixcraft - The Musician's DAW
Check out our tutorial videos on YouTube: Mixcraft 10 University 101
Check out our tutorial videos on YouTube: Mixcraft 10 University 101
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Hi Greg,
I recorded to the left channel of my audio interface and correspondingly to the left channel in Mixcraft. This results in a mono signal with the same playback coming out of both left and right channels. I am able to pan left and right to emphasize volume more on the left or right but I must use a stereo plugins for that to work. With a mono Waves plugin activated, panning is not possible.
I recorded to the left channel of my audio interface and correspondingly to the left channel in Mixcraft. This results in a mono signal with the same playback coming out of both left and right channels. I am able to pan left and right to emphasize volume more on the left or right but I must use a stereo plugins for that to work. With a mono Waves plugin activated, panning is not possible.
- Acoustica Greg
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
Hi,
Which Mono Waves plugin, exactly?
Greg
Which Mono Waves plugin, exactly?
Greg
Mixcraft - The Musician's DAW
Check out our tutorial videos on YouTube: Mixcraft 10 University 101
Check out our tutorial videos on YouTube: Mixcraft 10 University 101
Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
CLA Guitars
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Re: mono vs stereo versions of a plugin
I just tried CLA Guitars and had no issues with panning, though I was using the mono/stereo version.
M
M