C
Chibi Nappa
New member
I don't know if this is common or not, but I just stumbled upon it. I always record the underside of the snare, but I rarely end up using it. Today I was mixing a song that was just a pain in the ass as far as the snare drum was concerned. Ghost notes all over the place, so I couldn't get a clean gate. Reverb just wasn't working at all on the top snare mic since the sound up there was very dark and thud-y. As a result, reverb trails were very dull and had no sparkle. I was about to give up and replace it with a sample (and that would have been a pain due to the ghost notes)...
So what I ended up doing was gating the underside snare mic (didn't really care if the ghost notes were cut out there) and applying reverb to it while leaving the upper snare mic compleatly dry. I ended up with a nice snap/thud and ghost notes from up top, and clean sparkly reverb trails from the mic underneeth.
Anybody else ever try that?
So what I ended up doing was gating the underside snare mic (didn't really care if the ghost notes were cut out there) and applying reverb to it while leaving the upper snare mic compleatly dry. I ended up with a nice snap/thud and ghost notes from up top, and clean sparkly reverb trails from the mic underneeth.
Anybody else ever try that?