
tubedude
New member
I've seen people ask about this from time to time, and I have a method of doing it that works for me and is editable.
If his is what you are talking about
----> HERE <----
I"ll be back shortly to go into how I do it, and maybe anyone else will add thier own methods afterwards....
Ok, 1st thing I did was make a quick 5 second audio file saying "I think this is a cool effect" in Sonar 2... Simply bring up a clip of the audio you want to process and cut it down to where only the 1st word or sound is there.
Next, I added a lush cathedral reverb (just for this purpose, a less lush but long reverb works better because it doesnt cloud the fade in quite so much like this one did.)
I did this in about 4 minutes, by the way. So its pretty quick and easy.
Anyway, after adding the reverb to the audio clip, I bounced it down to a stereo track with the reverb tail.
Next I reversed it, and moved it over the top of the original track that I wanted to fade, and lined them up where it didnt pop too bad (its very easy to do a much better job than this, this was a quick sample)
Then, after hearing my own voice on here, which I hate, I decided to manipulate the whole thing a little so no one would hear how crappy I sound, so I added Waves 3 Voice harmonizer on a setting called Bizzaro or something like that.
This way, you can edit it how you want it and keep trying different things.
I dunno, it works for me, should work for you.
Anyone else have good ways to do it?
If his is what you are talking about
----> HERE <----
I"ll be back shortly to go into how I do it, and maybe anyone else will add thier own methods afterwards....
Ok, 1st thing I did was make a quick 5 second audio file saying "I think this is a cool effect" in Sonar 2... Simply bring up a clip of the audio you want to process and cut it down to where only the 1st word or sound is there.
Next, I added a lush cathedral reverb (just for this purpose, a less lush but long reverb works better because it doesnt cloud the fade in quite so much like this one did.)
I did this in about 4 minutes, by the way. So its pretty quick and easy.
Anyway, after adding the reverb to the audio clip, I bounced it down to a stereo track with the reverb tail.
Next I reversed it, and moved it over the top of the original track that I wanted to fade, and lined them up where it didnt pop too bad (its very easy to do a much better job than this, this was a quick sample)
Then, after hearing my own voice on here, which I hate, I decided to manipulate the whole thing a little so no one would hear how crappy I sound, so I added Waves 3 Voice harmonizer on a setting called Bizzaro or something like that.
This way, you can edit it how you want it and keep trying different things.
I dunno, it works for me, should work for you.
Anyone else have good ways to do it?