Flemming Rasmussen - Signature Presets for TC2290-DT
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 11 ธ.ค. 2024
- The Puppet Master behind Metallica’s most legendary albums, Flemming Rasmussen dials in a trio of 2290-DT delay presets for vocals, rhythm and lead guitar. You can get them right here: bit.ly/flemming...
Filmed at Sweet Silence Studios, Copenhagen.
Check out 2290-DT here: bit.ly/tc2290
This is also a great illustration of where everything belongs in the mix to give clarity. The bass has a specific chunk of the spectrum, as do the drums, as does the guitar. Great video!
Cool video.
I always wanted the classic TC2290 Delay in my track when I was engineering full time in the 1990s, but never got around to buying one as my Eventide H3000 set my budget back and shortly after I started my new photography business.
Now that I am engineering again, I plan on buying the TC2290-DT. Sound's like a great unit and I love the hardware interface. I wish more companies would sell these controllers with their plugins. Well done. BTW: I still have the TC1144 Bass Pre Amp in my rack which I bought in the late 1980s or early 1990s. (Brain Fog on the year I bought it!)
Philip
NYC Area
Hello. Please consult! If I buy a hardware controller, do I need to pay separately for the plugin itself? Thank you!
what band and song is he working on...sounds superb
you controlled the plugin with your mouse like 20 times
You don't use the legendary Trident A-Range anymore Flemming?
Excellent @tcelectronic
Thank you, Luis 🙂
The Long Delay sounds completely out of phase - when summed to mono, it almost disappears.....that can't be right. I'd never use that.
That’s a solid observation, Jakob, and you’re absolutely right - this particular mix isn’t mono compatible and would have a tough time when played back on some DAB radios, mobile phones and such. These Signature Presets videos all aim at showing commonplace dial-in procedures from a slew of super skilled and experienced engineers, and are meant to serve as inspiration for your own mix work.
Phase inversion (left wet out of phase with right wet) was/is typically used to widen the stereo image of a mono signal (using a chorus setting). If you activate the pan and/or pan-modulation on the unit, the inversion is deactivated. :)
Thanks for sharing the observation, mate, I’m sure a lot of people out here in youtube-land can draw inspiration from it. Much appreciated!