P
picknpaws
New member
Hi,
I'm a noob playing with recording my guitar. I am playing finger-picking and chord/melody on an acoustic-nylon with an under-saddle piezo pickup. I am recording straight into a little portable digital recorder (24-bit).
My questions are for when I master on the computer. Here's what I currently do:
1st ---- I apply some EQ to remove bottom end boominess
2nd ---- I apply some compression to smooth out the peaks and valleys
3rd ---- I duplicate the recorded track and pan one left and one right
Now, I would like to add some final additional finishes -- perhaps some chorus, some delay, and/or some reverb.
My question is --- typically, which fx would I apply first?
I've read that for "acoustic" guitar, adding some chorus can really "fill out" the sound. I've personally found that adding some delay can also add some dimensionality. I can play with the settings, but I don't know which order to apply the fx. Is there a "typical sequence" for applying the fx???
Thanks!!!
I'm a noob playing with recording my guitar. I am playing finger-picking and chord/melody on an acoustic-nylon with an under-saddle piezo pickup. I am recording straight into a little portable digital recorder (24-bit).
My questions are for when I master on the computer. Here's what I currently do:
1st ---- I apply some EQ to remove bottom end boominess
2nd ---- I apply some compression to smooth out the peaks and valleys
3rd ---- I duplicate the recorded track and pan one left and one right
Now, I would like to add some final additional finishes -- perhaps some chorus, some delay, and/or some reverb.
My question is --- typically, which fx would I apply first?
I've read that for "acoustic" guitar, adding some chorus can really "fill out" the sound. I've personally found that adding some delay can also add some dimensionality. I can play with the settings, but I don't know which order to apply the fx. Is there a "typical sequence" for applying the fx???
Thanks!!!
), when it comes to reverb, you have to ask yourself the question of just what final effect you're looking for. If you're looking to make something sound as if it's an effected source being played within a room or space where there's some dimension and distance to teh sound, then place the reverb last. If you're looking to make some artifical-sounding "kewl" effect that doesn necessarily sound like an actual physical reverberation, then you can apply effects or processing after the reverb.


I thought the "eat a cup of coffee" was the funny part...