Mid Side Mastering with the Fairchild 670 Compressor

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Uploaded by on May 21, 2007

The Fairchild 670 is a great mono and stereo compressor, but did you know that it has a unique feature that lets you compress the mono signal separately from the stereo signal? Watch the video to learn how.

To learn more about UA's Fairchild 670 Compressor plug-in, visit: http://www.uaudio.com/store/compressors-limiters/fairchild-670.html

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Music

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  • We all know this is not a real fairchild. If it sounds good and helps your mix, and works for you in your budget, then use it.

  • Everyone knows NS-10s sound bad, but they're widely regarded and proven to be the best to balance audio on. If you can make your mix sound good on them, they sound good anywhere. Also the best for figuring reverb times.

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  • why are music engineers so ponsy theese days!!! just because they can be!! or is it down to musical snobberey!!! i would like to know. me myself i love recording in mono with a good notch of compression for good old fashion do what you think is right for the track and not follow trends. i think now their is so much possible with digital recording that people have lost the real sound of an insrument recording in analog.

  • @zapzzapzzapz maybe you should actually listen . you cant hear a guitar part stronger in one speaker whilst the main track energy stays centered in the middle??

  • Yeh nice job!! IT'S IN MONO!!! Mid/Side tutorial in mono is quite useless..

    Thanks though. :P ;)

  • your all just a bunch of idiots

  • the link is broke over there

  • First off, not all audiophiles drink or sniff corks. Secondly, audiophile systems are usually of incredibly expensive components, which most commercial grade equipment doesn't use. The quality of resistors, capacitors, etc., can GREATLY change the signal path. Plus, audiophiles are used to comparing live instruments to recorded instruments without the use of eq, compression, limiting, expansion, gating, etc. They want as close to exact reproduction as possible.

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