J
JonPaulP
New member
I'm using the reverb that came with Cubase Essential but was wondering if there was anything better to use for a classical tenor voice. Any recommendations?
Thanks!
Thanks!
Convolution, or impulse-based reverbs are IMGO the best of the bunch, for something as demanding as classical.I also remember someone recommending a convolution reverb. Any good plug-ins for that? Is it really a big difference from a 'regular' software reverb?
Quality impulses from the Lexicon 960 are probably my generic go-to when I do use impulses. There are lots of great room, chamber, hall and plate impulses from the 960, depending on your need and taste.I download SIR1 and some impulses on Noisevault a while back, but haven't seemed to find the right impulses for the right sound. Which impulses do you recommend? Thanks.
Just out of curiosity, and if you don't mind my asking, Mike, just what kind of bargain are we talking about these days?i just got an H3000. what flipping bargain those things are lately.
Very interesting tip, John. I've always been afraid to compress reverb because of the tendency to change the spectral response of the verb, and also because I always tended to prefer not enough reverb to too much reverb, and the concept of "overdo" on the reverb has been kind of counter-intuitive for me. That said, though, I admit I never set it up in the manner you describe, and I can imagine by your description what you're aiming at there. I'll have to give that a try, it sounds very interesting.The point is to "push the verb out of the way" during the louder parts, but (A) it keeps the verb a bit more "lush" for the softer parts and (B) allows the verb to "blossom" after vocal transients - Not unlike what your ears would distinguish** in a hall setting.
Good Reverb for Classical Voice Track?
Just out of curiosity, and if you don't mind my asking, Mike, just what kind of bargain are we talking about these days?
G.
One thing I find myself doing with classical is fairly substantial but gentle compression of the reverb. 1.1 or 1.2:1, 50ms attack, maybe a half second to two second release depending on the verb and the "hall" you're trying to create...
Make a verb that sounds very nice and "overdo it" just a bit on the loud passages, insert the verb and set the threshold for maybe 6dB of gain reduction on those loud parts. Readjust the threshold to taste.
The point is to "push the verb out of the way" during the louder parts, but (A) it keeps the verb a bit more "lush" for the softer parts and (B) allows the verb to "blossom" after vocal transients - Not unlike what your ears would distinguish** in a hall setting.
** How your ears & brain react - Not what's actually happening in the hall. This is what I've always done to "mimic" that wonderful anomaly.
The difference is HOW you approach it. In a hall, you just play/sing differently. You belt it out, enjoy the luxury and take more chances. In my living room, I play everything safe and it sounds sterile, no matter what kind of processing I do.
Everybody now:someone one is cooking something in the kitchen, the baby is asleep upstairs, there's a dog yelping its head off in the backyard somewhere and that the garbage truck is due to rumble by in a few minutes.
Agreed. Which is probably a large contributor to the platitude about too much reverb.@ Glenn (etc.) - Although I find this almost a "necessity" for adding verb to classical recordings, I tend to do the same to a varying extent more times than not. Rock, pop, metal - Even live FOH work. When you really want to "hear the verb" on those quiet parts, it can quickly screw up the whole mix on the louder passages.
Which - until nowCompress it pretty hard and you have that "blossom" where there is actually room for it and a tight, controlled verb that automatically "moves out of the way" where there isn't.