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    @Beat Kaufmann said:

    This is probably a fateful question because 1000 people will now tell you that their reverb is the best. 

    So do I!

    I mainly use Breeze and B2 today.

    I use only MIR. I would never go back to all of those complicated setups of the past.  I remember using Altiverb for example - many different microphone placements, only one sound source - exactly the opposite of what is needed for orchestral music.   I guarantee anyone who tries MIR will never go back to what they used to have.   It is the most perfect reverb ever created for orchestral instruments.


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    @mvo-music said:


    - What can i do to improve results, what am i missing?
    - Some tips and tricks maybe (heard something about dropping eq at certain frequencies).
    I'm using VSL Hybrid Reverb from rather finely positioned channels; so that for certain effects I'm taking the 'XFade' control to a low number which makes the reflection a smaller field, vs 100% which is completely diffuse.

    EQ, well it depends on the space, doesn't it.

    I demoed MIR Pro extensively. I loved it but for certain things I really preferred working with Hybrid. I like working with the tail and most of the time I was using MIRacle on the master bus in VE Pro with a send from a pretty dry room bus. I'm not doing traditional symphonic and naturalism doesn't really suit most things I do.


  •  Well yeah, if you are doing non-traditional-orchestra mixes, other reverbs would be appropriate. I just mean for doing VSL orchestrations, MIR is an amazing tool which simultaneously solves all problems of mixing.  I remember using many different approaches in the past for this or that problem, and MIR puts those all together.  The only thing one might really need to add is some additional EQ and hardware reverb like Lexicon but even those are optional since MIR has excellent EQ as well as specifically tweaked instrument profiles, and the MIRacle plugin which gives you an algorhythmic type additional reverb wash.    


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    This post shall support all of us who still are fighting for getting a nice orchestra mix with "common" effects...

    ...because there is no thread without a Halleluja for MIR but never such a Halleluja for all the mixers with common plugins.

    Without any doupt MIR (and MIRx which I use as well) is a great help for mixing all the orchestra instruments.

    But we shouldn't forget that MIR is an effect... Since we have MIR - and a lot of users use it - we lost the diversity of mixes which we had before .

    Today all the orchestras sound more or less the same or similar way. Sometimes I don't know why the samples are recorded dry and not

    directly with the MIR-sound. So now...

    To all MIR users: Don't forget what your dry samples are able to with "simple convolution reverbs" - coming also from VSL by the way.

    Why always the same sound from the balcony... Your VSL-samples can do much more...

    Listen to this short Pre-Mix as an example (The Appassionata Strings, some Brass instruments, Piano, solo Viola, solo Violin, Percussion...) - without MIR. Does it sound really bad? Either way it sounds different to MIR, but it also comes with a nice depth and transparency, warm strings...and this without all the gadgets of MIR. For new approaches I invite you to... from time to time.

    Now to all those without MIR: Fight on with your effects for keeping the diversity and a wide variety of interesting mixes...

    Now I hope to survive this post...[;)]

    Beat


    - Tips & Tricks while using Samples of VSL.. see at: https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/vitutorials/ - Tutorial "Mixing an Orchestra": https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/mixing-an-orchestra/
  • That is an odd attitude for someone posting on this Forum.  To fight to NOT use VSL products?

    But anyway I've done many mixes without MIR.  I have been mixing samples since the late 80s believe it or not. Before any of the current systems, before even MIDI, using Roland, EMU, Korg etc. samplers, played without any computer and recorded on multitrack tape recorders.  And ever since then...  But now, with MIR there are not a lot of "gadgets" - that is the whole advantage, you don't need a lot of gadgets - like separate plug-ins, hardware, whatever for every single element of a mix.  That is when you really need "gadgets" - when you don't have MIR. 

    Though of course you can do a mix without it. But my point is it is so perfect for orchestral use that it makes the process easy, which was never possible in the past. 


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    @William said:

    That is an odd attitude for someone posting on this Forum.  To fight to NOT use VSL products?

    Dear William, this I didn't say.

    The history of this thread in short:

    1. mvo-music (new to VSL) had a reverb routing question  >>> soon Dietz answerd with "MIR".

    mvo got the SUITE EFFECTS and he wants to use all the reverbs of it...

    Later on...

    2. mvo-music asked about algorithmic reverbs  >>> your answer, Willam, was  "MIR".

    Not everybody has the money for buying MIR but nevertheless quite every answer to a mixing-question here is MIR.

    mvo-music could think that he is really doing something wrong when he is cooking his menus with common/usual ingredients.

    So I thought to tell here him and others that spaghetti also can tast well when they are cooked with tomatos, onions and several spices instead of using the best "easy-to-use-Ketchup" .

    And further I said that you get more different spaghetti-menues (also bad ones of course) with tomatos, onions and several spices  than with Ketchup.

    That you have to fight with all these separate ingredients for getting a tasty tomato sauce you confirmed, thank you.

    Finally I also said that since we have MIR all the menus taste a bit of Ketchup.

    And I also offered a mp3-menu, done with several ingredients but also with a little Ketchup as well (percussion).

    This was the content of my post above, my dear William - now translated into the world of kitchen of course.

    After such a lot of tomato sauce I will spice my next menu with Worcestershiresauce....[:D]

    Best

    Beat


    - Tips & Tricks while using Samples of VSL.. see at: https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/vitutorials/ - Tutorial "Mixing an Orchestra": https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/mixing-an-orchestra/
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    @Beat Kaufmann said:

    This post shall support all of us who still are fighting for getting a nice orchestra mix with "common" effects...

    ...because there is no thread without a Halleluja for MIR but never such a Halleluja for all the mixers with common plugins.

    Without any doupt MIR (and MIRx which I use as well) is a great help for mixing all the orchestra instruments.

    But we shouldn't forget that MIR is an effect... Since we have MIR - and a lot of users use it - we lost the diversity of mixes which we had before .

    Today all the orchestras sound more or less the same or similar way.

    You aren't speaking for me. At the moment I can't justify the expense of MIR in two ways, the more salient thing being I'd need to at least double my computing power to justify the cash. But I completed several projects with it and I miss it.

    If you have a lack of diversity in mixes that's one thing. MIR Pro has a number of very different sounding rooms, widely variant mic presets, different stereo configurations for the main room mic, mic at the back of the room, et cetera. So if you're unable to obtain diversity, that's you, not me. Why always the same sound from the balcony? You tell me. I did other things, I pointed players at the most reflective wall and played around with it. I think I came to it from a different worldview than yours.

    //the best "easy-to-use-Ketchup"// No, I was throwing chipotle and hot mustard on it through your ketchup container.

    However I have what for me will be a more convenient workflow through experience with Hybrid Reverb, and I like special reverb like slapback and other things that use the late reflections. There are presets like 'Nice Piano Hall' which is fantastic and that to replicate with MIR would be, well it wouldn't be that satisfying to do because it's not quite the right tool.

    Now it is true that a lot of what is posted here has a sameness of sound through the same kind of unexamined use of the very same tools in every case. I don't love the sound myself, if only because it reeks of 'obviously samples, quite good samples yes, but this lacks a sort of breath of life' which takes some massaging.

    But my other uses of reverb is way outside of acoustic naturality, while your music never seems to be. So I think certain of your opinions are not traveling as well as you might assume. For one, I don't think advocacy of the one tool is dismissive of all other tools. Even William's provided for that Lexicon. Which I don't love, I would use MIRacle which is a stunning hybrid usage.

    I've been around for a while and I was always very touchy with reverbs, for me convolution is a godsend and multiple imaging multiply so.


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    @Beat Kaufmann said:

    [...]

    Without any doupt MIR (and MIRx which I use as well) is a great help for mixing all the orchestra instruments.

    But we shouldn't forget that MIR is an effect... Since we have MIR - and a lot of users use it - we lost the diversity of mixes which we had before .

    Today all the orchestras sound more or less the same or similar way. Sometimes I don't know why the samples are recorded dry and not

    directly with the MIR-sound. So now...

    To all MIR users: Don't forget what your dry samples are able to with "simple convolution reverbs" - coming also from VSL by the way.

    Why always the same sound from the balcony... Your VSL-samples can do much more... [...]

    There's no doubt about the fact that VSL samples are extremely versatile, but I can't really subscribe to several of your statements.

    First of all: MIR is not "just an effect". Actually, MIR has been part of VSL's plans since 2002. It has been made with the main goal in mind to supply a holistic mixing solution for our sampled instruments, based on multi-sampled orchestral halls. Due to this unique approach, these halls (a.k.a. "Venues") can be _played_,  much like an instrument. ... not exactly what I would call an "effect". - But even if you don't want to follow that comparison: MIR Pro is more like a spatial mixing console, not a reverb effect (or anything else).

    Secondly: MIR RoomPacks cover a wide range of different Venues, like the 15 m² and 0.3 seconds of ambience in case of Studio Weiler's "Stone Room", up to some 650 m² and over 8 seconds reverb in case of Steinhofkirche. I can't really see any reason for using "the same sound from the balcony" all the time if you don't want to. (... which balcony, BTW?). Paraphrasing your words: "Your MIR Venues can do much more!" 😉

    And thirdly: Like in the real world (when recording an orchestra in a good hall), a good MIR-mix will _of course_ need additional work and tools, like a proper (hand-tuned) microphone setup, good placement of the instruments, some EQing, and maybe even additional effects like dynamic processing or algorithmic reverb sweetening. I can't remember that there has been a _single_ official statement that MIR is a fire-and-forget solution for all mixing tasks. Presets like the ones offered for MIRx can make mixing easier, no doubt - but like convenience food they won't replace gourmet cooking (if you get my drift).

    You're of course entitled to share your opinions here, Beat, but I think that this semi-official counterstatement should be tolerable, too. So please feel invited to re-discover MIR Pro! 😉

    Kind regards,


    /Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
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    Hi Dietz

    Thanks for your answer and all the details about MIR. I assume that you mentioned them for newbies and MIR-interested people.

    I never had the intention to start a fire here about MIR. I realized that MIR-emotions can go high even if I just say "MIR yes - but not only".

    That's probably because MIR solved heavy mixing problems of a lot of musicians. So I can understand that MIR is very important for them.

    Once more from my side here: Nothing against MIR !!!

    I also hope that some users here can accept that MIR not can cover (all my personal) mixing aims - as civilization 3 mentioned as well.

    Therefore I also need to use common effects (convolution and algo-reverbs). Once more my little Premix-Example from above for showing what I mean.

    Of course it also shall show to newbies and others that mixes are possible with common effects such as the VSL Hybrid-Reverb or the VSL Convolution-Reverb as well.

    Hi mvo-music

    Sorry for distroing your thread. You rember I said some posts above:

    "This is probably a fateful question because 1000 people will now tell you that their reverb is the best."

    And further below I said: "Now I hope to survive this post..."

    This you can learn here: The subject reverb, reverb-tools, reverb systems, reverb-handling, how to create depth etc. is a very emotional topic - in every forum!

    This is probably because you need to spend hundreds of hours until you find your way.

    MIR indeed can shorten the way of mixing an orchestra... And now for a last time: You also can get good results with Hybrid-Reverb for example... 😉

    Learning which parameters can modify the virtual depth (and more) with common reverbs is always a good basis for your mixing future.

    Now I hope that this last sentence not starts a fire again.

    Now I wish you a lot of success

    Beat


    - Tips & Tricks while using Samples of VSL.. see at: https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/vitutorials/ - Tutorial "Mixing an Orchestra": https://www.beat-kaufmann.com/mixing-an-orchestra/
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    @Another User said:

    Sometimes I don't know why the samples are recorded dry and not directly with the MIR-sound....

    Even if a person does everything inside MIR, and always with non-creative MIR settings, it's still better to start with dry samples. When I'm working with non-VSL libraries, where there's reverb in the samples, I can hear the reverb getting cut off unnaturally when the note is released. This is most evident in series of fast staccatos, where the amount of perceived reverb fluctuates awfully. And the legatos sound bad too, because as the samples are crossfaded, the reverb of the two samples clashes dissonantly. For this reason alone, it's much, much better to record dry and add reverb only after the attack, release, and crossfade have been applied to the samples.

    Personally, I produce music in all sorts of unnatural spaces, and again I want dry samples here so I can process them however I want before adding any reverb. But I'm still most interested in MIR PRO, because I'm demoing MIRx, and for those times I do want to simulate a natural space, MIRx is a lot more skilled than I am.


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    @Beat Kaufmann said:

    Hi mvo-music

    Sorry for distroing your thread. You rember I said some posts above:

    Hi everyone, hi Beat, 

    Dont worry fot destroying the 'original' thread, its good to have an ethical discussion now and then [;)]. I didn't expect this would be the result of my post when I created the thread though [:)]... 

    Regards, Mark