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#1
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anyone,
I have a DAW but it doesn't do side chaining. Is there a dirty trick for pulling this off with such a DAW? My interim solution was simply inserting the desired effect, bouncing the effected track to another channel, bypassing or removing the effect, and mixing the dry signal with the effected print in the DAW. Or to eliminate the "effect changes are a real pain in the ass factor" that I experienced, you could simply make a copy of the dry signal and effect the copy, and mixing the effected copy with the dry original in real time (I was out of CPU) Assuming that the dry and print are synched correctly, any difference in the end result of doing things this way vs. "real" side chaining? I have gotten great results with drums and vocals by doing this, but was wondering if I was missing something that could make it even better. My EP is already being mastered, but there is always the next one: ) I made a marginal vocal, recorded under poor conditions (but acceptible, the singer seems to have dropped off the face of the earth, so never came back to finish), sound fantastic with this method, so was wondering if there was anything to this, or if I just got lucky. It certainly is a lot more work than straight up side chaining on a capable mixer, but if it is a legitimate substitute for side chaining, I would rather mix right in my computer and save my cable, console, and 3 x 8 channel interface money for that TC Electronic and/or Creamware DSP hardware I am eyeballing: ) l8, 2mb |
#2
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The Waves C1 plugin can do sidechaining. But the implementation is quite
odd. If you have this plug and really want to know how to best use it for this purpose, I can post detailed instructions (it involves, insert effect paths, send effects paths, group channels, track channels, and proper panning (which with Cubase SX requires a free panning plugin!) I think there are free plugs too. Just go on cubase.net forums or nuendo.com and search for sidechain and you will see what others recommend. -brian "2mb" wrote in message news ![]() anyone, I have a DAW but it doesn't do side chaining. Is there a dirty trick for pulling this off with such a DAW? My interim solution was simply inserting the desired effect, bouncing the effected track to another channel, bypassing or removing the effect, and mixing the dry signal with the effected print in the DAW. Or to eliminate the "effect changes are a real pain in the ass factor" that I experienced, you could simply make a copy of the dry signal and effect the copy, and mixing the effected copy with the dry original in real time (I was out of CPU) Assuming that the dry and print are synched correctly, any difference in the end result of doing things this way vs. "real" side chaining? I have gotten great results with drums and vocals by doing this, but was wondering if I was missing something that could make it even better. My EP is already being mastered, but there is always the next one: ) I made a marginal vocal, recorded under poor conditions (but acceptible, the singer seems to have dropped off the face of the earth, so never came back to finish), sound fantastic with this method, so was wondering if there was anything to this, or if I just got lucky. It certainly is a lot more work than straight up side chaining on a capable mixer, but if it is a legitimate substitute for side chaining, I would rather mix right in my computer and save my cable, console, and 3 x 8 channel interface money for that TC Electronic and/or Creamware DSP hardware I am eyeballing: ) l8, 2mb |
#3
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#4
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#5
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"2mb" wrote in message thlink.net...
anyone, I have a DAW but it doesn't do side chaining. Is there a dirty trick for pulling this off with such a DAW? Nope. We've been over this a billion times on the Nuendo board. There are plugin developers that make stuff, but no real way to hotwire it. Yesterday I was using radical automation settings to pull down the hat every time the kick was hit on a hip hop drum loop. Couldn't even hear the compression working! -bh |
#6
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"BananaHead" wrote in message
om... "2mb" wrote in message thlink.net... anyone, I have a DAW but it doesn't do side chaining. Is there a dirty trick for pulling this off with such a DAW? Nope. We've been over this a billion times on the Nuendo board. There are plugin developers that make stuff, but no real way to hotwire it. Right. The plugin has to be written for it. I'm surprised by how much stuff is missing from DAW programs and that apparently most people don't even miss it not being there. But that's because they've never used it before. A lot of these people have never used a hardware board. A lot of people on Cakewalk thought I was a nut for always complaining that there was no (until this latest version 3.0) stereo buss or true subgroups. They couldn't see what possible use it could be because they'd never seen it before. Same with sidechaining. That said I'm aware of two DX plugins that can do it. One is actually from Cakewalk but it's mono only and you use one side of stereo track to control the other. Awkward but for what it is, it works. The other is from he http://www.db-audioware.com/dbd.htm |
#7
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