WMD Bus Rider - Stereo Multiband EQ/Dynamics Processor
WMD Bus Rider is basically a mastering-style processor for your Eurorack mix bus, squeezed into only 4hp. It’s designed to sit at the end of your signal chain and polish an entire patch or submix live, instead of processing individual voices.
What makes it interesting is that it combines three major mix-bus tools into one module:
- DJ-style 3-band isolator EQ
- Multiband compression
- Lookahead limiter
That combination is pretty rare in Eurorack, especially at this size.
Main workflow
You run your stereo mix into Bus Rider before your output module or recorder. Then you can:
- tighten low-end
- tame harsh highs
- glue sounds together
- increase loudness
- prevent clipping
- make live sets translate better on PA systems
It’s very much aimed at live performers and performance mixers.
EQ section
The isolator EQ works similarly to DJ mixers:
- each frequency band can be boosted or completely killed
- crossover points are adjustable
- low band can optionally sum to mono
The low-mono feature is genuinely useful for live venues because huge stereo bass can disappear or become muddy on club systems.
Compression section
The multiband compressor splits lows, mids, and highs separately, so:
- kick/bass can stay controlled
- mids can remain punchy
- highs can stay smooth without pumping the whole mix
That gives much cleaner compression than a normal single-band compressor.
Limiter section
The limiter is there to:
- maximize loudness
- catch peaks
- prevent clipping
- add optional saturation
Lookahead limiting is especially valuable in modular because transient spikes can get wild very fast.
Performance-oriented features
A few things make this more than just a “studio processor in Eurorack”:
- preset saving (9 presets)
- CV control over parameters
- assignable modulation input
- compact 4hp footprint
- integration with the WMD Performance Mixer MKII ecosystem
So you could automate EQ sweeps, dynamically alter compression behavior, or morph between mix states during a set.
Who it’s for
This makes the most sense if you:
- perform live with Eurorack
- use a performance mixer
- record stereo modular jams
- want cleaner/louder final mixes without external gear
- don’t have room for separate EQ/compressor/limiter modules
If your system is more experimental/noise-oriented and you want raw uncontrolled dynamics, it may be less essential.
Closest hardware philosophy
It feels conceptually similar to:
- end-of-chain mastering processors
- DJ isolators
- Elektron-style bus compression workflows
- compact live mastering chains
But optimized specifically for modular performance.
For 4hp, it’s actually extremely feature-dense.