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Nightshift
...Ninja Business...

Registered: Oct 2005
Location: Sacramento, California
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Mar-24-2011 02:21
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Looney4Clooney
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Apr 2010
Location:
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Mar-24-2011 02:28
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kitphillips
is actually a guy.
Registered: May 2006
Location: Sydney, Australia
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I have low cut in the past, but not without thinking about it. I've also boosted the highs, but never cut them. A compressor might be a good idea actually, its not something I've done before either, but might give a good effect...
___________________
New Mix: March 2010 Promo
Soundcloud|Facebook
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Mar-24-2011 03:08
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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Re: Re: EQ and Reverb Sends
| quote: | Originally posted by Nightshift
this is what i do personally but when it comes to the highs sometimes somewhere between 4 and 8k depending on how bright i want the reverb to be |
That's what I was thinking.
| quote: | [b]Originally posted by Looney4Clooney[/b
almost always. another thing is compression so that the levels taper when more elements are playing.
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I've heard it mentioned once before but how does that work. You do a comrpessor as an insert after the Reverb on the Aux channel?
| quote: | [b]Originally posted by Anthony Ross[/b
since the sends are usually 100% wet, i actually use the HP EQ in my reverb (Breverb) to do the same thing, anywhere from 100-200hz depending on the source. Only time i really let it get below 140k is if it's a lower vocal.
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Eh? Sends 100% wet? Do you mean your aux channel fader is at unity and you just send a little from the source channel (how I do it) or that the send knob on the source channel is at 100% and you just mix a tiny bit of the aux channel in to the mix?
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Mar-24-2011 03:26
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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| quote: | Originally posted by Looney4Clooney
the more elements playing , the more reverb will be created but generally when you have more things playing, you want to reduce the reverb because it looses its efficacy and at a certain point just introduces mudd. . Nothing crazy, just 3 to 6 db of reduction. |
the only thing I wonder about that is though, it would actually change the dynamics, not just the gain, so doesn't that cause problems with the reverb "fitting" with the elements it's being created from?
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Mar-24-2011 03:41
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derail
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2007
Location: Canberra, Australia
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For me, I highpass filter everything below 100-150 Hz on my "large hall" reverb. I lowpass filter the way someone else said, somewhere between 4 to 8 kHz. Depends on the sounds going through it. My "room" reverb is often fine without EQ adjustments.
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Mar-24-2011 05:33
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