#001 - Use a Pitch Shifter as a Mono-Safe Stereo Widener
Most stereo widening plugins work by phase-shifting or delaying one channel relative to the other. This creates width but breaks mono compatibility - the widened content cancels itself when summed to mono on club subs or phone speakers. A pitch shifter solves this differently: it creates two slightly detuned copies of the signal, which the brain perceives as width without introducing phase relationships that cancel in mono.
The technique
- Duplicate your synth or pad channel twice
- Insert a pitch shifter on each duplicate
- Set one to +7 cents, panned hard left
- Set the other to -7 cents, panned hard right
- Blend the duplicates at -6 to -10 dB under the dry centre signal
- High-pass both detuned copies at 200 Hz to keep the low end mono
The width is immediate and significant - typically wider than what stereo enhancement plugins produce, and it survives mono collapse intact. A common variation is to push the detuning to 12-15 cents for more dramatic width, but A/B against the dry signal - past a certain threshold the pitch shift becomes audible as detuning rather than perceived as width.
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