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H wrote:
I know little about this other than I think it's used to good effect in dance music. I'm just getting into trance production and think (in my wisdom) I can hear the effect of this on tracks I'm listening to. Can someone give an example of this (preferably in the trance/dance genre) i.e. not a specific piece of music but what is actaully done to achieve this. Also if it's possible to do this with cubase's own plugins (SX2) or UAD-1 plugs? Ducking is basically running one channel into the sidechain input of a compressor while the rest of the mix is processed by that compressor. When that first channel has signal on it, all the other channels are pulled down. This is a very common thing for applications like voiceover, or when you need to pull vocals way forward in a song, or when you have bass and drum interfering badly with one another and they are both poorly defined. You can use it to make any one channel come way forward in the mix. I have no idea how the techno guys are using it. But whenever you hear everything else getting softer when one source gets louder, it's probably the reason. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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