anonymous
12 July 2007
What do you think use two reverb when mixing? Is it a wrong way?
When i had recorded something include the room reverb,can i use reverb continue?
I 'm sorry for my stupid english.
Comments
Hey this is interesting stuff. I usually combine reverbs but s
Hey this is interesting stuff.
I usually combine reverbs but so far I have only done it in parallel (each reverb on its own auxiliary channel) and planning to experiment with it in series, which should make a difference.
In a DAW it would mean that you put 2 reverbs as an insert on the aux channel. In hardware it would mean that L+R out of reverb 1 go into the L+R inputs of reverb 2 and then back into the board.
What's your take on that?
Hi yxf933! No need to apologize. I'm assuming you're not a nat
Hi yxf933!
No need to apologize. I'm assuming you're not a native english speaker. Kindly let us know your location (in the profile settings) and there will never be a need to apologize.
There can be some very interesting effects from cascading reverbs (using two types of reverbs on the same signal.)
To get a very natural sounding reverb, you could use the same reverb twice using a shorter decay time the first time and a longer decay time the second time (perhaps with a little later early reflections too).
To get a wacky sound, you could use something like a bright plate first and then a long warm reverb next.
In my experience, I've found that using a shorter reverb first and a longer second is usually the best way to go. But....there's only one way to find out for sure - give it a try. If you like how it sounds, you've done something right.
Cheers!
Jeremy