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Hi, the mixer wants wave files of all the instruments, but the problem is, they all go through the same reverb. This mix is not final, but a short demo for a label, so I won't go as far as making separate tracks for every instrument's reverb.

Is this:

track 1: snare + reverb
track 2: hi hat + reverb
track 3: synth + reverb

same as this?

track 1: snare
track 2: hi hat
track 3: synth
track 4: reverb from all instruments

I'm using P-Tools, rewired with Reason.
Thanks.

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Comments

anonymous Fri, 03/04/2005 - 09:45

Why not let the mix engineer add the reverb at mix?? If you hand them mono tracks with printed verb they will have no control over the level of verb you choose. If you put the reverb for all the instrements in one stereo pair you still will not have any control over the individual reverb balance.
If you love your verbs sound then give him a mono source track and a stereo verb track for each instrument. Then there is complete control during mix but still using your verb sound.

Kev Fri, 03/04/2005 - 11:33

rasputin7095 wrote: ... but the problem is, they all go through the same reverb.

:shock:
so ??

there was a time when all you have in the studio was one reverb.

AND

some of us old-timers wish we had just one decent reverb in the box as a plug
I still don't think there is a plug that sounds as good as the old dedicated boxes

perhaps having stereo reverb track for each instrument is the problem
too many accoustic spaces for the one song

just a thought

wwittman Mon, 03/07/2005 - 12:42

If you really think the reverb is part of the sound to that degree.. I'd jump in with both feet and just bounce each sound WITH its reverb to a .wav file and he's stuck with it.

but I am a bit confused... if you are only using ONE reverb, then really you're not tailoring it to each individual sound..
why can't you simply describe the parameters to him and let him recreate it again as one overall reverb on his mix?
Can't you make really good notes as to what you used and how you used it as a suggestion as to what he should try?

If you SO don't trust him, why is he mixing your record? And why aren't you?

anonymous Mon, 03/07/2005 - 18:09

if your not using the reverbs to paint "panaramic space" and the reverb is just part of the dry sound then keep it mono becuase thats the root sound on that track your are recording. let the mix engineer paint the stereo field to your taste , if you want it dry then you can leave it mono dry, if you want it to be in a "room" and in a certain panaramic spot within that room , let the mix engineer handle that. obivously your recording was done in mono with one mic probably in a "dead" room, so if your going to add reverb it's going to be synthetic. The mix engineer should have the best equipment for that job.