I'm so glad I watched this. The subtle changes made such a difference. The song is so good. The adjustments to the mix made it even more enjoyable to listen to.
I think these are great techniques, many of which I regularly use. I think something helpful for newer engineers would be to provide the perspective of before and after with soloing the reverb. Though you always want to understand the sound in context, some of these especially subtle characteristics will really stand out when soloed. Thank you again!
Thank you for the comment! Yes, indeed, some aspects of sound are quite subtle, and it’s not always easy for a beginner to pick up on them. I was thinking about this too-demonstrating these things in solo is also necessary, and perhaps using more exaggerated settings would help, even if we use lower values in actual work.
Starts the video saying don't use this preset, then uses the same preset for every example... also, you don't need to split into lows and highs. You can control low tails by decreasing the lower damping modifier.
Predelay and ducking can be used together, creating a very effective combination. When the reverb delays slightly, the attack of each note comes through without overlapping with the reverb signal itself. Additionally, the reverb separates from the main sound, making it clearer. Ducking lowers the reverb volume during moments of active vocal presence, which works well to clear up the mix-especially when the reverb is large and dense. This approach is perfect for tracks where the vocals need to soar. For smaller room reverbs, however, ducking isn’t necessary.
@@StyxAudioPresetsdo more like the take your shoes off podcast if you want to add small drawings that react to the video. His way of doing it is something you could do
@StyxAudioPresets the video was fine. Don't cave to these whiners who don't have the ability to do it themselves then expect you to cater to them. It's your show, your channel, do what you do, true fans will be here.
I can't get through 30 seconds of this video because of all the annoying swoosh and bam sound effects. Now THAT'S amateur, boss. Maybe next time... cheers
Yes, it seems my video editor decided to showcase all their skills.))) Well, this is the first video on the channel; we’ll take your feedback into account going forward.
I'm so glad I watched this. The subtle changes made such a difference. The song is so good. The adjustments to the mix made it even more enjoyable to listen to.
Great video. Thank you
Glad to see your tutorials in English. Thanks
I think these are great techniques, many of which I regularly use. I think something helpful for newer engineers would be to provide the perspective of before and after with soloing the reverb. Though you always want to understand the sound in context, some of these especially subtle characteristics will really stand out when soloed. Thank you again!
Thank you for the comment! Yes, indeed, some aspects of sound are quite subtle, and it’s not always easy for a beginner to pick up on them. I was thinking about this too-demonstrating these things in solo is also necessary, and perhaps using more exaggerated settings would help, even if we use lower values in actual work.
Excellent Value Video , and nice teaching style , we need you !!!
Thank you 🙏
The new level is to watch your videos in English. Spasibo, ochen' polezno kak vsegda Roman👍
A lot of good tricks here. Thanks for sharing.
Lots of great stuff!
You know are great my friend thank you
Great knowledge tnks
very useful tutorial
Starts the video saying don't use this preset, then uses the same preset for every example... also, you don't need to split into lows and highs. You can control low tails by decreasing the lower damping modifier.
If you duck the reverb by sidechaining soothe 2, do you still need to use pre-delay?
Predelay and ducking can be used together, creating a very effective combination. When the reverb delays slightly, the attack of each note comes through without overlapping with the reverb signal itself. Additionally, the reverb separates from the main sound, making it clearer. Ducking lowers the reverb volume during moments of active vocal presence, which works well to clear up the mix-especially when the reverb is large and dense. This approach is perfect for tracks where the vocals need to soar. For smaller room reverbs, however, ducking isn’t necessary.
@@RomanStyxStudio Thanks
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🙏
Sorry but who the f are you to tell m3 not to use reverb?
👍🔉🔉🔉🎛
normalno 🎉🎉🎉 podatscha ogon’
the constant edits and sound effects are very annoying please make videos without them
Thank you for your comment; we probably did go a bit overboard with the editing dynamics. :)
@@StyxAudioPresetsdo more like the take your shoes off podcast if you want to add small drawings that react to the video. His way of doing it is something you could do
@StyxAudioPresets the video was fine. Don't cave to these whiners who don't have the ability to do it themselves then expect you to cater to them. It's your show, your channel, do what you do, true fans will be here.
@@The1unknownbeatmaker Thank you for your support!
Your video is awesome.
The edit makes it very simple to assimilate.@@StyxAudioPresets
I can't get through 30 seconds of this video because of all the annoying swoosh and bam sound effects. Now THAT'S amateur, boss.
Maybe next time... cheers
Yes, it seems my video editor decided to showcase all their skills.))) Well, this is the first video on the channel; we’ll take your feedback into account going forward.
No problem here... that's just the modern way to do.
@@florentchatelain3057can we see some of your content as an example?