Thank you SO much for your precious teachings. Only last June I bought and installed Spectralayers 11 Pro for the first time, and I was able to understand something about it only after following your detailed instructions. Really precious. Great!!
One day, there will be a software where you will drag all your problems which will be resolved by a simple click on a simple button called Batch Processing. Fantastic tutorial Phil and you deserve to appear on Steinberg’s site!
I took up the offer of a cross grade from Rx ten some time back, SpectraLayers is MUCH more capable, consistently gives better results and is cheaper too!
Hi Phil, good stuff again. I look forward to finding your future tutorials on the Steinberg help portal. Quick question, was your sample audio recorded mid/side?
ok, so, I mainly work on mono sources which UnMix M/S for which SL will warn with a dialog which says "there aren't enough channels..." I certainly got some interesting results with an old dbl-tracked vocal of mine mixed down into stereo and which I no longer have the tapes...thanks for the tip, cuz it is highly useful :-)
@@eureitz7490 yes. Unmix mid side will only really work on a stereo source. However, it might be useful to convert the source to stereo of you are hearing any odd artefacts and then do unmix mid side. It’s always worth experimenting a little.
@@Not_Too_Woke_To_Be_Anti_Woke In that case there are basic options: 1. Don't select anything and just de-ess the whole file. Or more likely this is what you mean... 2. Select the ess you want and then hold shift and select the rest of your esses. (Or click the button at the top left "Add to selection") 3. Select by clicking and dragging an area left to right but not up and down, to choose a certain frequency range only. 4. Select your ess (using as close a box as you can, i.e. not ALL frequencies) use the Select Similar function in the Select Menu.
Thank you SO much for your precious teachings. Only last June I bought and installed Spectralayers 11 Pro for the first time, and I was able to understand something about it only after following your detailed instructions. Really precious. Great!!
It is my pleasure, thank you
Thanks!
One day, there will be a software where you will drag all your problems which will be resolved by a simple click on a simple button called Batch Processing. Fantastic tutorial Phil and you deserve to appear on Steinberg’s site!
@@jocelynjosssheehy2970 Thank you
Very helpful, learn alot from this video, will be looking at your past video
@@DavidWilliams-nk6hi Thank you. That’s very good to hear.
I took up the offer of a cross grade from Rx ten some time back, SpectraLayers is MUCH more capable, consistently gives better results and is cheaper too!
@@groovedealerfeaturing-ashl6476 That’s great to hear. I hope these videos were useful. Cheers.
Hi Phil, good stuff again. I look forward to finding your future tutorials on the Steinberg help portal.
Quick question, was your sample audio recorded mid/side?
@@eureitz7490 Thanks once again. The example in this video was just a standard stereo file. Exported from Nuendo.
@@PhilPendlebury thanks for the quick response. ok, I'll try the Unmix M/S =-D
@@eureitz7490 it really depends on the desired result. In this case, there were some artefacts from the stereo reverb once it was removed.
ok, so, I mainly work on mono sources which UnMix M/S for which SL will warn with a dialog which says "there aren't enough channels..."
I certainly got some interesting results with an old dbl-tracked vocal of mine mixed down into stereo and which I no longer have the tapes...thanks for the tip, cuz it is highly useful :-)
@@eureitz7490 yes. Unmix mid side will only really work on a stereo source. However, it might be useful to convert the source to stereo of you are hearing any odd artefacts and then do unmix mid side. It’s always worth experimenting a little.
you are awesome! love your video!
@@awesomesound-z7x Thank you
@@PhilPendlebury no! thank you! your video really taught alot and i love your voice, has that soothing feeling
Can one Deess all "S"'s in one go or are we stuck with processing one "S" at a time?
Yes, you can just make a selection and process the selected area 🙂
Perhaps I wasn't clear. I mean if one has 4 minutes of spoken words how do I select all "S" s and fix all sibilance in one go?
@@Not_Too_Woke_To_Be_Anti_Woke In that case there are basic options:
1. Don't select anything and just de-ess the whole file.
Or more likely this is what you mean...
2. Select the ess you want and then hold shift and select the rest of your esses. (Or click the button at the top left "Add to selection")
3. Select by clicking and dragging an area left to right but not up and down, to choose a certain frequency range only.
4. Select your ess (using as close a box as you can, i.e. not ALL frequencies) use the Select Similar function in the Select Menu.
@@PhilPendleburyThank you!