No... but I've pulled down the fader on the room mic tracks... I've even used a "ducker" on occassion... but couldn't think of how to actually use a gate in that application... [how would you set up a gate to do that? You couldn't 'key' it off the guitar... that would open the gate... a 'ducker' would turn down a signal when hit with a 'key' input... but not a gate]
I was thinking you could have the gate set to close when the volume of the guitar rose above a certain level (maybe an expander would be better in this application). It's kind of a one man/limited tracks approach.
I was thinking you could have the gate set to close when the volume of the guitar rose above a certain level (maybe an expander would be better in this application). It's kind of a one man/limited tracks approach.
If you mean that when the guitar rose above a certain level it would turn off the room mic(s)?
That's a 'ducker'. When one signal reaches a certain volume, it turns down another signal.
FWIW, I will often 'duck' room tracks on a guitar sound around the lead vocal... that way when the singer ain't singing I have this huge guitar tone... and when the singer is singing, the guitar gets smaller allowing more 'real estate' for the vocal tone.
Though in this case I'm looking to duck the room mic to give more presence to the guitar rather than to make way for a vocalist. Other than that minor difference what you said is pretty much what I was thinking of. Ta.