Quote:
Like if it was "modulated" up and down by single, really low frequency tone.
That is indeed the case. This problem occurs mainly when there are asymmetrical sounds with a low bass. Either the bass or the mids can be asymmetrical - for bass this is why I made the "Remove asymmetric bass" checkbox.
What I think happens in most other processors is this:
- Bass, say 35 Hz
- Tone
- Result: Tone gets a drop at every peak and valley of the bass, so 2*35 = 70 times per second. And you hear harmonics of the clipper come and go in the total frequency range.
What happens in Stereo Tool:
- Bass, say 35 Hz
- Tone
- One of the two is asymmetrical
- Holes get punched on one side. This causes drops 35 times per second.
Now of course that would happen in other processors as well. Because in ST there's no harmonics distortion, the distortion with drops per second is far more noticeable than the 70 times per second - in most other processors (excluding BBP and Omnia 9) I would expect the opposite.
One thing that strongly affects asymmetry is the phase rotator, which differs from what other processors use. This might very well explain why ST has problems with other tracks than other processors.
The real problem for ST in this situation is that in case of asymmetry the bass behaves as if it's bass at half the frequency. Which means that a tone at 40 Hz has the same effect as a symmetrical tone at 20 Hz. The bass clipper removes very low bass freqs to avoid this effect, but it doesn't - or at least not enough - take asymmetry in the mids into account.
A possible solution would be to make the mids symmetrical by clipping them harder (for bass there's already a checkbox, so you can just turn that on). The big disadvantage of doing this for mids is that you'll loose loudness. And add more clipping.