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It looks to me as if there was one preamp used for the plugin chain that the EQ and compressors then simply process. Here, individual per module would be nice. But I do get the aim at this plugin being a channel strip, not a highly surgical tool.




Metric Halo Channel Strip 3 Crack



Despite of the minor routing and compressor setup issues, on top of the smaller GUI, I do like that this channel strip comes with two compressors, while either one can be put into Expander mode. Usually you only have an EQ/Compressor combination, sometimes maybe even a Gate. Routing was also barely addressed until outside the box thinking picked up drive during the last couple of years. So this is definitely a welcome sight.


This plugin caught me off guard. Granted, it is not a channel strip as known from clones of SSL / NEVE, or more modern tools like Metric Halo and Eventide. That is not its main aim. ChannelStrip MK2 has its own charm, while trying to be as flexible as possible. That is definitely a good thing.


After you achieve a great sound with a channel strip plugin, you can print your multitracks and start the mixing process. Channel Strips can also be used in bus tracks or even for mastering. Some plugins have a distinct sound that can add incredible flavor to your productions.


UX: Do you want to feel like a legendary, old-school producer or engineer? This UX will get you there. True to the original channel strip, the EQ on the SSL 4000 E Series features four adjustable bands plus HP and LP filters. 2ff7e9595c


  • errolmaybury8429cs
  • Aug 21, 2023
  • 7 min read


After a Taiwanese pop star filmed a four-minute video in a Grandview, Wash., cherry orchard, the demand for cherries in Asia boomed, crows cherry promoter Eric Melton. Cherry growers paid $100,000 for the MTV-style video, but the value was "about $3 million," reports Capital Press. The gain came through higher prices, so that while Asian buyers may have bought fewer cherries this year, they paid more for each one. That's because the fruit is considered a high-status item that's worth the high price, Melton says. Coming up: a grower-financed production of a "Real World-type television show." It will star Asian students cavorting in a cherry orchard somewhere in the Northwest. What with all the real-life shootouts in the West, maybe a pretend six-gun contest is no longer fun. Or is it? The folks in Ketchum, Idaho, are debating that question after someone complained about an annual faux shootout in the street. Every September for the last 42 years, bad guys have blasted blanks at costumed lawmen before biting the dust on Main Street. It all takes place during the Wagon Days parade, which features buggies and horse-drawn rigs. But after the school shootings in Colorado, one Ketchumite complained, and a parade committee responded by proposing to end gunfights as entertainment. Gun battles in the former mining town were never the norm, AP reports. "The Ketchum community's sole claim to fame may be that it is where Ernest Hemingway killed himself with a shotgun blast in 1961." Critics said the shootouts had become boring, in addition to celebrating violence. No way! responded six-gun supporters, who gathered 2,700 names on a petition. On Nov. 2, everyone got to speak out on the issue through an election; the result: 561 Ketchum residents said keep blasting away at desperados; only 173 people said they'd rather the gunfight dropped dead. The city council has not yet taken a position. The Vancouver Museum in Canada operates a tiny FM radio station, broadcasting only one hit show - the keening sounds of whales picked up from underwater microphones. "All whales, all the time" is the station's unofficial motto, reports Econews. So when a language-conscious government form inquired whether the station broadcasts in English or French, museum officials could only reply, "whales." A scientific debate about Yosemite Valley's habit of shedding massive sections of rock, a geologic process called "exfoliation," got down and dirty recently. The name-calling kicked off at an annual meeting of engineering geologists in Salt Lake City, Utah. There, Chester "Skip" Watts delivered a scientific paper pinpointing sewage from Yosemite National Park as the cause of granite slabs tumbling thousands of feet. Ridiculous, countered the chief of public affairs for the park. "We have had some staff people read his material, and the general conclusion was that a lot of what he was saying is crap," reports the Salt Lake Tribune. Answered Watts: "He's right, it is a bunch of crap, but it's coming out of their toilets." Exactly where the crap is coming from is important. In 1996, 20-year-old Emiliano Morales of Montebello, Calif., was killed by massive sections of rock plunging 2,400 feet to the valley floor; this past summer, Peter Terbush, a 22-year-old climber from Gunnison, Colo., was killed when a slab sent huge boulders crashing down. The Park Service says that rock falls are acts of nature. In Montana, the Great Falls Tribune has already called this story "the strangest tale of 1999." It features a 21-year-old man from rural Sun Prairie who shot a llama and claimed it was a deer. True, the llama had been hanging out with a bunch of does, said a game warden, but its long neck and shaggy wool should have given it away. The hunter was so convinced he'd bagged a deer that he took his kill to a game processor, House of Meats in Great Falls. The processor "wanted no part of the llama." The llama, it turns out, had been a working stiff. It protected sheep from coyotes and bears on the Cascade Hutterite Colony. Here's another hunting story, or maybe a comment on modern life. It features a a bowhunter who told Associated Press in Kalispell, Mont., that he'd ensconced himself 12 feet up a tree to wait for a passing deer. The hunter, who wishes to remain anonymous, thought his aerie was perfect until he heard a group of deer snorting and saw a lion padding in his direction. Looking down, he saw the "pretty good-sized cat" sniff his tracks and the twigs he'd broken climbing the tree; the lion, he realized, was stalking him. So he did what any hunter can do these days: he whipped out his cell phone and called home. His wife quickly alerted wildlife officials, who said they'd come to the rescue, though not for hours. When the lion finally lost interest, the hunter says, he took the opportunity to skedaddle. In San Francisco, people fearing a nuclear catastrophe from Y2K bared all to draw attention to their cause. Some 50 nuclear activists threw off all their clothes and marched near city hall, chanting "Disrobe for disarmament." The nude-in of late October was sparked by Patch Adams, the doctor of movie fame, and Helen Caldicott, also a doctor and activist. Both warned of nuclear accidents occurring on Jan. 1, 2000, if computer systems around the world crash, reports AP. Following the interesting reasoning of Wyoming Gov. Jim Geringer, states should tax children the most, since they're all cost and no income. Geringer explained his new-fangled tax policy at a recent meeting of the Wyoming Taxpayers' Association in Cheyenne. Asked about an income tax to make up a budget shortfall, Geringer said he wouldn't want the tax because it targets the rich, and they're not the ones using state services. It's people earning less than $36,000 who need the most help, he told the Casper Star-Tribune, and "the highest consumers of service ought to have some skin in the game." The governor said that anyone getting help from the state needs to have "some sense of personal accountability. That's where I think an income tax in Wyoming would miss the mark." Heard around the West invites readers to get involved in the column. Send any tidbits that merit sharing - small-town newspaper clips, personal anecdotes, relevant bumper sticker slogans. The definition remains loose. Heard, HCN, Box 1090, Paonia, CO 81428 or [email protected]




Desperados Wanted Dead Or Alive Patch



All week the markets have hung on every word coming out of Washington. Nothing else has mattered: not earnings, not Europe's problems, not even the second coming of Christ could have distracted investors. Now that both political parties have achieved what they wanted, let's please stop the monkey business before it's too late.Credit Suisse, a global broker/investment banker, said on Thursday that in the unlikely event that the U.S. defaults on its debt, the economy could contract by 5 percent and the stock market could lose one third of its value. Although I believe that is an extreme view, the entire mess over the debt ceiling is causing hesitation and delay among the nation's business sector.Companies have put all sorts of decisions on hold until the crisis is resolved. That includes hiring and investment decisions that directly impact the employment rate and our economic growth. The timing couldn't be worse. The economy is just starting to recover from a soft patch caused by the slowdown in Japan's economy. In addition, our unemployment rate has recently notched up to 9.2 percent. We can't afford these shenanigans.However, the increase in our debt ceiling is only one of an emerging two-part problem in our economy. Credit agencies are warning that unless we do something to reduce spending and the deficit, our credit rating may be reduced. Now that wouldn't be the end of the world for America, after all, Japan's credit rating was reduced early this year with little consequence. But it certainly wouldn't help the pace of our recovery nor improve the jobless rate.As we go down to the wire, it appears that if there is to be a deal on raising the debt limit, then both parties will need to agree to disagree and postpone a big deficit-cutting plan until after Aug. 3. There is simply not enough time to hammer out a compromise in the time allotted. There will be a price to pay for a deal of that sort. The markets and the country's corporations will continue to hesitate until a deal is struck that will satisfy the credit agencies.A compromise budget-cutting plan that cuts $2 trillion or so from the deficit over 10 years will not cut the mustard. The agencies are on record as wanting at least double that amount in order to stave off a credit reduction. The Democrats, led by President Obama, wanted a "Grand Plan" that would answer the demands of the credit agencies and put to rest the deficit politically as an election issue.The Republicans want the opposite. They see the economy, the deficit and unemployment as the three most likely opportunities to unseat the Democrats next year. By foot dragging now, they can keep the controversy alive and hopefully capitalize on an anemic and aging recovery while continuing to ask "Where are the jobs?" If in the process either the country defaults or our credit rating is reduced they are betting Obama will be blamed for that along with the economy.They are counting on voters to forget by election time who did what to whom in this debt controversy. I suspect their gamble will pay off.After all, how many voters remember that the TARP Plan (just one example) was approved before Obama took office? Did you know that the huge deficit we are saddled with actually occurred during the Bush administration? Between his tax cuts and the initiation of two wars, President Bush, with the aid of today's Republican leadership, not only spent the surplus garnered under the Clinton years but wracked up $8.813 trillion in additional new debt. The Democrats under Obama have added $1.136 trillion in the form of economic stimulus and tax cuts. Economists argue that without that spending our country would have remained in recession or possibly fallen into a depression. In addition, Obama will spend $152 billion on health-care reform and $278 billion on defense. The vast majority of the money spent on these policy initiatives won't even be spent until years in the future, if at all.As an independent voter, I am less inclined to listen to either parties' rhetoric and instead focus on the facts. The facts are that the financial crisis, the deficit and the subsequent rise in the unemployment rate are the legacy of the Bush administration. I can applaud the GOP for belatedly realizing that they have been on a spending spree for the last decade, but don't blame others for your party's failings.Sure, if you choose, you can blame Obama and his team for failing to generate a quick recovery, but enough already with this myth that he is the root cause of today's problems in America. As Americans, we deserve more from Washington. 2ff7e9595c


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