Is the solution to give MC a multi-band audio compressor? (Limiting is a subset of more-versatile compressing.)
This is THE method to prevent bass pumping (and other problems), universally used by radio and TV stations , on-line broadcasters, recording studios, theaters, etc. It caught on in the 1970s as very expensive hardware (originally a $20K box), but today is usually done via software.
It would be WONDERFUL if MC could integrate a multi-band compressor.
Background...
The problem of overall level "pumping" on bass peaks used to be annoying -- and often quite audible -- on over-the-air radio and TV stations, because they MUST limit max audio/modulation per FCC regs (and physics). The final stage of the audio chain is a compressor, followed by a limiter. If this is applied to the entire audio stream, the loudest sound element tends to control the overall volume, and periodic peaks that tower above the average trigger the compressor and/or limiter and force the entire audio level to be briefly reduced. When these periodic peaks are the bass line of a song, the effect is continual pumping up-and-down of the rest of the sounds in the mix.
It used to be a minor problem because analog discs could not have especially strong bass -- if the groove swing was too wide, it either distorted the adjacent groove or required spacing grooves more widely, thereby limiting total playing time. So strong bass, which might exist in the original master tape, was always limited and/or rolled-off when mastering for LPs and 45s.
But the problem increased over the years. By the late 1960s LPs were becoming shorter due to fewer tracks (10 or 11 instead of 12 to hold the retail price by reducing royalty fees), which also meant the bass level on vinyl discs could be increased. Then when CDs arrived the bass limitation virtually disappeared (obvious on "modern" recordings, and sometimes a revelation when hearing an old recording re-mastered for digital -- the bass is back!).
But as recordings gained bass, the pumping problem for radio/TV stations got worse. It couldn't be handled by fixed audio-chain EQ, which if set to reduce excessive bass would reduce ALL bass, including on records that were already balanced. The solution was and is dynamic multi-band compression (rather than limited, because raising low levels is also desirable at times; a compressor can be set to only do peak limiting when desired).
In multi-band compression, the incoming audio stream is split by frequency range into 5 or more channels (some use 8 or even 10). Each channel is processed by a compressor, then all channels are recombined as final output. This degree of control allows bass to be controlled without affecting other frequencies. (A stereo stream requires dual multi-band processors, and each band is cross-controlled so identical compression is applied to L and R to prevent sound stage image wandering.)
When properly set up, the limiting/compressing effect is very smooth when applied via 5 or more frequency-specific channels. This approach both eliminates the bass-pumping problem AND creates much more consistent and rich audio across the wide range of mixes that radio stations (and music collectors) encounter.
There are commercial multi-band compressor plug-ins, usually sold to broadcasters (on-air and on-line), movie, video production and recording studios, but usable with MC (but at a notable price). A while back I wrote an article about how I use one such plug-in (intended for Winamp) with MC:
http://www.advisor.com/story/how-get-radio-station-sound-your-own-music-collectionBut I'd much rather be able to use MC's internal processing than have to add plug-ins that aren't truly MC-aware. All MC needs is to add a multi-band comrpessor!
Note that a commercial product typically is complex, but an MC version needn't be. Professional devices have many, many, many adjustments, to tune the frequency bands of each compressor channel, to adjust trigger points, attack and release times, and a lot more. Some are truly necessary -- trigger levels and release times must be very different for pop vs. classical music. But it's possible to simplify to just a few controls and a few settings -- after all, a radio or TV station's audio processing, once set, is used for everything it broadcasts.
I use my MC + compressor setup for music, movies, TV, and find the result so consistently smooth that I forget about the processing -- until I hear a system that lacks it and wish it wasn't so "lame".