Appendix tutorial – TC Electronic Finalizer 96k User Manual

Page 49

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49

APPENDIX

Tutorial

Finalizer Tutorial

The Finalizer is an extremely powerful tool that allows you to

tighten up most material. Working intelligently on several

frequency-areas the Finalizer will enhance the energy and and the

level of your mix, making the sound punchier and louder yet

adding the feel of air when needed.

As there are different approaches to the Finalizer, we created this

tutorial to make you familiar with the Finalizer.

Be aware that processing your material with the Finalizer can be

rather addictive, in the sense that you might want to add more

and more and sometimes too much from the Finalizer’s powerful

tools. However, though you do not notice at first, heavy

Multiband compression and Soft-clipping does generate “listen-

ing fatique” more easily than material where more of the natural

dynamic range is preserved.

So use your ears and and enjoy the features of the Finalizer as so

many already do, by applying the right amount of processing in

any given situation.

The MAIN PAGE of the Finalizer shows you the signal flow, and

the actual order of the processing.

The Input

Select your type of Input: Analog or Digital. If you are working

with an Analog Input you should use the level bars to optimize

the performance of the A to D converter.

Remember to choose the right Sample Rate, i.e. if you are target-

ing on CD you should always choose 44.1kHz.

Now recall the CD-Master preset, by pressing the RECALL key,

select CD-Master and press OK to recall.

The EQ

In the EQ you can change the spectral shape of your material.

Inserts

Select between DRG, Stereo Adjust, Dynamic Equalizer,

Parametric Equalizer, External Insert, MS Encoding/Decoding

and Stereo Enhance.

Normalizer

Optimizing the level of your material begins in the Normalizer.

Here you have a graphic presentation of the incoming signal. By

increasing the gain, you decrease the headroom, shown as two

dotted lines.

You should set the gain such that the signal peaks are just below

or above the dotted headroom lines.

The Expander

The Expander is a great help when you clean up the basic mix,

and works either as a soft Expander or as a sharp Gate.

Try to listen to the start of your mix, do you have any tape or

recording noise ?

If you have and you want to remove it, use the Expander as

follows:

Set the Ratios to 1:32, this is the steepness of the Expander.

Now adjust the Threshold. The Expander starts working when the

signal drops below the Threshold point.

Play the music from the top a couple of times, and confirm that

the start is silenced.

If you only want to remove tape noise, it might be enough to use

the high band Expander only.

The Compressor

The Compressor is the heart of the Finalizer. This section adds

that extra “punch” to your material.

When you are applying Multiband Compression you have to

survey the program material, i.e.; is there too much or too little

top-end or low-end? Is the midrange well defined? A standard

situation could be that you have a mix which sounds good, but

lacks tightness and could use more of that “in your face” sound.

Now put the Finalizer in bypass, and recall the “CD-Master”

preset. Start your mix and de-activate the bypass. You will hear an

immediate change in the sound of your mix, because the

“CD-Master” preset was designed to tighten up almost all types of

rhythmic music that you hear today. In most cases, you will only

have to adjust the Input level by using the Normalizer.

If you want to make changes to the overall relationship of the low,

mid, high bands using the Compressor, you have two paths that

you may take to accomplish this task. The first way is to alter the

band levels, using them like a three band equalizer. The second

way is to individually compress the three bands. It is here, in the

Multiband Compressor, where you will hear the big difference.

A good Compressor will always tighten up a mix, but it will also

remove some of the dynamic expression. The key to the operation

of any Compressor is the Attack and Release times. These two

parameters greatly influence how ”tight” the mix is going to be or

how “open” the material will sound after compression.

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