Merry Christmas - Immanuael...

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Try cutting the amount and/or length of the verb on the vocal during the main part of the song. Does it make it sound more present?
 
"YEP, very nice. Happy Holidays"

Thanks Elton, a very Merry Christmas to you and yours!

"Try cutting the amount and/or length of the verb on the vocal during the main part of the song. Does it make it sound more present?"

I appreciate that dobro! I don't actually have as much verb "during the song" as you hear at the end? (and it's a different kind? Big long plate for the Latin at the end.) If you're listening to the verb at the end, during the Latin Acapella part? Well yeah, that would suck during the song... In the actual song (not the ending) it's no where near that wet! And a little verb? Well :-) I've found some people like it? And some don't? And there are arguments to be made on both sides of that isle...

However? Always use a high pass on your verb bus regardless.

Most people here don't comment anymore so thank you both very much.
 
I loved the chant. I'm going to go listen to some gregorian chant now. :)
 
Thanks Crows :-) It's in Latin. I'm not Latin? Or Latish? Or Latvian? Or a Latino? But It's intended to recreate monks chanting in Latin. Although I am not a Monk? Or a Monkfish? Or a Monkey? MERRY CHRISTMAS!! AND HEY! IT'S 12/21/2012 AND WE'RE STILL HERE!! WOO WHO!! *** U MAYAN CALENDAR!!
 
But..... it's not Christmas yet Robby.... :confused:


Robby.... you're drunk. Go home. :p
 
I've heard (and do) the opposite. I cut high end on verb.

Who knows, some people use the terms backwards. I use a 'band pass' and roll off the highs and the lows. If you use a long tail and a lot of verb gotta roll off those lows or get mud. Most of my tracks have a lot of mud.

My new favorite is vocal dry up the middle, long tail band passed verb on a send in the lower right corner.
 

You said you liked Gregorian Chant. He corrected you and said he was singing in Latin. I made a joke, time to get all Dies Irae up in here. Dies Irae is a Gregorian Chant, in English - Day of Wrath, aka the theme to The Shining. Hope that helps :-) Then he used about a thousand question marks for no reason.
 
You said you liked Gregorian Chant. He corrected you and said he was singing in Latin. I made a joke, time to get all Dies Irae up in here. Dies Irae is a Gregorian Chant, in English - Day of Wrath, aka the theme to The Shining. Hope that helps :-) Then he used about a thousand question marks for no reason.

Yeah, he uses question marks as a period or exclamation point sometimes. :p


But, he was singing Gregorian wasn't he? Gregorian means "together." I didn't think the language had any bearing on what Gregorian Chant was.
 
Yeah, he uses question marks as a period or exclamation point sometimes. :p


But, he was singing Gregorian wasn't he? Gregorian means "together." I didn't think the language had any bearing on what Gregorian Chant was.

It is typically, in Latin :-)
 
Gregorian Chant is early Catholic liturgical music, origins in the 500's, sung by Monks, later re-worked by a number of classical composers...
 
To what date does it extend to. I'm learning a chant around the time of the Crusades I think.


Salve Regina.
 
Lol. As a side note the Shining soundtrack is awesome. If you haven't, go listen to it. Now.
 
To what date does it extend to. I'm learning a chant around the time of the Crusades I think.


Salve Regina.

I think that one is somewhere between 1000 and 1200, but not sure. That one is part of a 'pair' - Regina Caeli is the other one.I don't know when they stopped composing in the style....
 
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