... so I can't see any unwanted “coloring” here, thus there's nothing to “suppress”, like Beat implies. Quite contrary -...
Dear Dietz
On the one hand is the theory and on the other hand are results.
The first reason why MIR (and the venues) "colours" the music: Since VSL produce their demos exclusively trough/with MIR all of them sound more or less the same way - the MIR-way. The huge versatility of the dry sample-demos in the earlier days disappeared completely. This means for me: MIR has its own sound, given by the venues and the way it mixes instruments - always the same way. Funny is, that even if we have lots of parameters we can recognice whether a mix is done by MIR or not. The second and main reason why MIR colours the sound are the venues. Those venues are calculated a lot of times into the samples. Sometimes we have results which are not the ones we wanted to have... Please listen once more to two examples for showing these colouring-mixing facts:
A) Realsound - Orchestra trough MIR So what on earth added this boxy or cheesy sound? The samples itself sound way more natural.
B) DS-Cellos - from an official VSL-Demo... Now listen to this Cello please. Which one sounds more free from added "colours"? Who or what added the potty sound into the DS-Cellos? It is not me who imply anything, it is MIR and its venues which applies such (sometimes extrem) colours. Each typical "room-colour" is probably OK and the sound we want, but what shall we do when it gets too much? ...as we can make out in the two upper examples?
I always use the EQ within your Convolution Reverbs for correcting (suppress) the main colours of a certain used venue. Maybe you could do this as well a bit for the venues of MIR (by default). Then the "common user" will get even better results with MIR without doing anything and in any case - even he use a 100% wet ratio.
All the 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/