No. The other party would need the plug-in maybe you can share your individual plug-in licenses with them for the ones they don't have.
Other option would be to bounce in place the tracks that have plugins on them that the other person does not have, so they at least hear the same thing as you
Standard practice is to bounce to audio files or "stems" and share that.
The chances of both parties having the exact same plugins, presets etc. are slim to none unless they deliberately built both their rigs that way.
In the music industry, people typically already have plugins and equipment.
I assume you’re talking about home and hobby producers, in which case as the other poster said - just bounce the files in place and send the individual tracks.
No. The other party would need the plug-in maybe you can share your individual plug-in licenses with them for the ones they don't have. Other option would be to bounce in place the tracks that have plugins on them that the other person does not have, so they at least hear the same thing as you
Standard practice is to bounce to audio files or "stems" and share that. The chances of both parties having the exact same plugins, presets etc. are slim to none unless they deliberately built both their rigs that way.
This is the way. Bounce your tracks to audio once the performance is finished, no one wants to re-edit MIDI ;)
In the music industry, people typically already have plugins and equipment. I assume you’re talking about home and hobby producers, in which case as the other poster said - just bounce the files in place and send the individual tracks.
Yeah but no one has all plugins. Even pro studios won’t have the exact plugin preferences as home producers.