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A useful 4-band transient processor
Computer Music, Fri 6 Nov 2009, 4:10 pm UTC
It can be beneficial to split audio source material into separate frequency bands (eg, bass, midrange and treble) for processing purposes, and multiband effects are now commonplace in the computer musician's plug-in folder.
While they can be harder to get to grips with - and can do more harm than good if used incorrectly - they do give you a degree of control and flexibility that's not found with single-band processors. Compression, limiting and distortion are typical processes you'd find in multiband form, but MT_1 from Soniqware is a little different in that it's a transient processor - it enables you to boost or subdue the attack and release portions of your signal independently, in four frequency bands.
The interface is much like any other multiband effect, with a graph displaying the crossover points and separate controls per band. The linear-phase crossovers work in a straightforward manner, and have three slope options (12dB/24dB/48dB per octave), and adjustable crossover frequencies (the minimum width of any one band is an octave, eg, 1.2-2.4kHz).
The fun begins when you start using the controls to adjust the transient content of each band. You manipulate the attack and release (aka sustain) stages using gain (-/+12dB) and time controls for each. The latter dictate how long the attack and release stages are boosted or attenuated for, with ranges of 1-100ms for attack and 10-1000ms for release.
For instance, with a short attack time, you can add a sharp 'click' to the start of a drum sound, whereas longer times will give more of a brutal punch. There are makeup gain sliders and solo/bypass switches enabling each band to be auditioned in turn - handy for fine-tuning settings.
One downer is that the makeup gain is applied even when a band's processing is bypassed, making it hard to set up 'like for like' comparisons. Also annoying is the fact that there's no global reset button, and resetting band crossover points can shift them to illogical positions.
On the plus side, the global Link switch enables you to (relatively) adjust the controls on all bands at once, which makes dialling in the exact amount of attack/release gain on all channels easy as pie, though, as we've said, a global reset button would be handy to return a preset to its default state.
Highly useful when dialling in any kind of subjective effect processing is good old A/B comparison functionality, which enables one to flip back and forth between different setups. The effects of dynamics processing can be quite difficult to judge, so we were pleased to see that MT-1 comes with A/B/C banks as part of its built-in program manager, with each bank containing 16 slots. You can load a preset into each bank, then flick between them by selecting A, B or C, or simply create them by clicking on one and dialling in your own setups.
One downside is that browsing about in bank B takes the A and C banks to the corresponding preset slot, slightly reducing functionality. More worryingly, trying to load a saved preset using MT-1's preset manager resulted in an error stating that the FXP file was "inappropriate", though we were able to save and load via Cubase's preset system without a hitch.
Worth mentioning is that the MT-1 can operate in stereo, left or right channel-only and mid/side modes to boot.
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Reasonably easy to use. A/B/C comparison very handy. Impressive sonic results. Clean sound.
Preset system has issues. Some annoying interface quirks.
MT1 is easier to use than your average multiband dynamics processor, with a different sonic flavour to boot.
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MT-1
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