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Post by mrholmes on Jan 12, 2020 9:57:47 GMT -6
Sometimes I like to remind listeners to an 80s style Lead Vocal reverb. I love for this the Lexicon-PCM Hall plug in.
Often the RV sits better in my mix cutting out HMF -down to 2,0 khz- for the reverb tail only.
The Lexicon PCM plug ins are the only ones I know that can EQ late vs. early.
Are there any other products which can do it?
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Post by drsax on Jan 12, 2020 10:01:23 GMT -6
I’m not sure if any other verb plugs have that ability, but I still use the Lex PCM plugs a lot. The random hall gets used on nearly every mix I do.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 12, 2020 12:55:27 GMT -6
Sometimes I like to remind listeners to an 80s style Lead Vocal reverb. I love for this the Lexicon-PCM Hall plug in.
Often the RV sits better in my mix cutting out HMF -down to 2,0 khz- for the reverb tail only.
The Lexicon PCM plug ins are the only ones I know that can EQ late vs. early.
Are there any other products which can do it?
Sure. Exponential Audio NIMBUS, R4, Stratus, Symphony have 6 types of independent early/late EQ: 1-pole Lowpass, 2-pole Lowpass, 1-pole Highpass, 2-pole Highpass, Bandpass, Notch. Exponential Audio R2 Surround has 4 types of independent early/late: 1 & 2 pole Lowpass, 1 & 2 pole Highpass. In the case of R4 and Symphony, the EQ is optionally modulatable by LFO. All of these reverbs work nicely in stereo, in addition to the additional surround formats supported by some. In the interest of full disclosure, I wrote the Exponential Audio plugins and the Lexicon PCM plugs. I haven't used the Lex stuff in years.
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Post by mrholmes on Jan 13, 2020 6:07:57 GMT -6
Sometimes I like to remind listeners to an 80s style Lead Vocal reverb. I love for this the Lexicon-PCM Hall plug in.
Often the RV sits better in my mix cutting out HMF -down to 2,0 khz- for the reverb tail only.
The Lexicon PCM plug ins are the only ones I know that can EQ late vs. early.
Are there any other products which can do it?
Sure. Exponential Audio NIMBUS, R4, Stratus, Symphony have 6 types of independent early/late EQ: 1-pole Lowpass, 2-pole Lowpass, 1-pole Highpass, 2-pole Highpass, Bandpass, Notch. Exponential Audio R2 Surround has 4 types of independent early/late: 1 & 2 pole Lowpass, 1 & 2 pole Highpass. In the case of R4 and Symphony, the EQ is optionally modulatable by LFO. All of these reverbs work nicely in stereo, in addition to the additional surround formats supported by some. In the interest of full disclosure, I wrote the Exponential Audio plugins and the Lexicon PCM plugs. I haven't used the Lex stuff in years.
OH that's not a lot of verbs which can do it the Lexicon and my Yamaha hardware verbs can do it too. Is it hard to code?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 13, 2020 8:15:29 GMT -6
OH that's not a lot of verbs which can do it the Lexicon and my Yamaha hardware verbs can do it too. Is it hard to code?
Coding an EQ isn't really a difficult thing to do. Whether you can do separate EQ for early and late is really more a function of the overall reverb architecture. Every design choice you make can possibly close the door to certain options, so the reverb designer has to carefully weigh the value of different approaches.
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