Mix Roastby M Street Music
EQ & Frequency

What is Mid/Side Processing?

Mid/side processing separates a stereo signal into two components — the center (mid) and the sides — allowing you to EQ, compress, or otherwise process each independently.

How It Works

A standard stereo signal has a left channel and a right channel. Mid/side (M/S) processing re-encodes this into two different components: the mid signal (everything that is identical in both channels — the center of the stereo image) and the side signal (everything that is different between the channels — the edges of the stereo image). Once separated, each can be processed independently before being decoded back into stereo. Mathematically, the mid signal is the sum of left and right (L+R), and the side signal is the difference (L-R). This means that a vocal panned dead center exists only in the mid signal, while a guitar hard-panned left exists equally in both mid and side. Elements panned partially will appear in both, with varying amounts depending on their pan position. M/S processing opens up possibilities that standard left/right processing cannot achieve. You can boost the high frequencies of only the side signal to add "air" and width without brightening the center vocal. You can cut low frequencies from the side signal to tighten the low end in mono (a common mastering move). You can compress the mid channel differently from the sides to control the vocal level without affecting the stereo width. It is an advanced technique that provides surgical control over the stereo image.

Why It Matters for Your Mix

Mid/side processing gives you independent control over the center and edges of your stereo field — something that standard left/right processing cannot do. This is invaluable in mastering, where you receive a stereo mix and cannot adjust individual tracks. If the vocal (center) needs more presence, you can boost the mid channel in the 2-5 kHz range without affecting the panned instruments. If the mix needs more width in the highs, you can boost the side signal above 8 kHz. In mixing, M/S processing on busses can solve problems that seem impossible otherwise. A drum overhead recording can be processed with M/S EQ to tighten the kick (which is in the mid) while adding sparkle to the cymbals (which are largely in the sides). Used wisely, it is one of the most powerful tools for shaping the stereo image and frequency balance simultaneously.

Common Mistakes

Boosting the side signal too much

Cranking up the side signal makes the mix sound wide in headphones but causes severe problems in mono — the boosted side content cancels out, leaving a thin, hollow center. Always check your M/S processing in mono to ensure the mix still sounds full.

Using M/S processing on every track

M/S processing is most effective on stereo busses, the mix bus, and in mastering. Applying it to individual mono tracks does not make sense (a mono signal has no side content). Reserve M/S processing for stereo sources where you genuinely need independent center/side control.

Forgetting that M/S changes affect mono compatibility

Any boost to the side signal adds energy that disappears in mono playback. Any cut to the mid signal reduces what is heard in mono. Always verify M/S processing decisions in both stereo and mono to ensure the mix translates well across all playback systems.

How We Analyze This in Your Mix

RoastYourMix analyzes your stereo image by examining the correlation between left and right channels, the energy distribution between mid and side components, and the mono compatibility of your mix. We flag mixes where the stereo image is imbalanced (too much side content relative to mid, or vice versa) and evaluate whether the center elements maintain clarity and presence.

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Frequently Asked Questions

It is a common and effective mastering technique. Bass frequencies below 100-200 Hz in the side signal can cause phase issues on playback systems and consume headroom without adding perceived low-end weight. Applying a high-pass filter to the side signal (around 100-150 Hz) tightens the low end and improves mono compatibility.

Yes, boosting the side signal increases the perceived width. However, this comes at the cost of mono compatibility — the boosted side content will cancel in mono. A safer approach is to cut the mid channel slightly in certain frequency ranges, which relatively enhances the sides without adding energy that disappears in mono.

Most stereo widening plugins use M/S processing under the hood — they boost the side signal relative to the mid. Some add additional processing like short delays or phase shifts. M/S EQ gives you more precise control because you can target specific frequency ranges for widening rather than affecting the entire spectrum.

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