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ok,
I have been looking at hardware stuff: kurzweil ksp-8, eventide dsp7600, tc electronic,lexicon, etc. software plugins dont match these units supposedly, including the uad reverbs? but what about the convolution reverbs? are they really as good for reverb? altiverb, sir, wizoo, waves IR II, etc? are they worth it in reference to hardware units? they would make things easier mixing in DAW for sure. looking for opinions from people who have actually compared them? thanks george |
#2
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The Realm wrote:
but what about the convolution reverbs? are they really as good for reverb? altiverb, sir, wizoo, waves IR II, etc? are they worth it in reference to hardware units? they would make things easier mixing in DAW for sure. If you have the computer power, then they're OK. If you don't, they'll make a mess of your DAW workflow. And you never know until you try. How much power you need depends on many things, nearly all of which vary from project to project. There's no point in posting a list of what you have in your computer because at some time, some project will exceed its capability. Hardware reverbs are nice, but you need a way of interfacing them, and it's unlikely that you'll have enough of them, and in enough variety, so that you can have a different reverb on every track. That seems to be a production style that's popular these days, but it's certainly not what real life is like. As to comparisons, there's really no fair comparison between any two reverbs, hardware or software, other than perhaps cost and number of instances (limited to one in the hardware case, of course). You just mess around with what you have or can afford and make the best of it. -- If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) |
#3
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In article ,
The Realm wrote: ok, I have been looking at hardware stuff: kurzweil ksp-8, eventide dsp7600, tc electronic,lexicon, etc. software plugins dont match these units supposedly, including the uad reverbs? but what about the convolution reverbs? are they really as good for reverb? altiverb, sir, wizoo, waves IR II, etc? are they worth it in reference to hardware units? they would make things easier mixing in DAW for sure. looking for opinions from people who have actually compared them? thanks george I own a number of hardware and software reverbs, 4 of each. And I find uses for both kinds. My 2 fave hardware verbs are a lexicon 200 and 300L. I use them all the time. In particular, the rich place on the 200 is the cat's meow on lead vocal. My fave software verb is Altiverb. Very good for specific spaces or a realistic plate. It's rather amazing in fact. I just mixed a song that opens with solo bagpipes that I recorded in studio, and with Altiverb you'd swear I'd hung a couple mics in a cathedral. Very dramatic and realistic, even to my ears. Buy good tools. And don't trust the pretty ads you see in the magazines. Talk first to the folks who use those tools. And make sure the folks talking about those tools have a clue. David Correia www.Celebrationsound.com |
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