best reverb for drums
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- KVRist
- 133 posts since 9 Apr, 2004
When you say reverb, do you mean a small to medium studio room type verb for thickening or more of an ambience reverb? I'd suggest trying the former in place of the latter.
fizbin
fizbin
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- KVRist
- 292 posts since 25 Dec, 2003 from Bay Area, CA, USA
Try using a convolution reverb, with IRs of chambers (or alternatively, some Lexicon chamber samples). The EMT 250 is a pretty "thick" or fat sounding reverb that works great on snares or most any percussion and the EMT 140 (a dense plate reverb) works well as an overall drum verb too. You should be able to find free IR downloads of any of these (although the Lexicon verbs and the 250 use modulated delay lines, which can't be accurately represented with a static IR...the IRs still sound very nice though). Make sure to check out http://www.echochamber.ch , they have IRs of the 250, 960L (check the chamber/ambience/room programs), and samples from the UA emulation of the 140 plate.
For an algorithmic verb, try demoing the ArtsAcoustic one.
For an algorithmic verb, try demoing the ArtsAcoustic one.
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- KVRAF
- 8708 posts since 24 May, 2002 from Tutukaka, New Zealand
I'll second brianbrian. Also the ambience impulses from the 960 and PCM91 are very good for rock drums. There's a nice set of 960 plates - but I'm not personally that keen on plates for drums. Rock drummming tends to be recorded live in drum rooms, so you poosibly would do better with the ambiences and rooms. A different kettle of fish for electronic drumming obviously.
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- KVRist
- 292 posts since 25 Dec, 2003 from Bay Area, CA, USA
Forgot to mention, for thickening, some gated or non-linear patches work well. Probably the best examples of these programs come from the Roland R880 verb and the AMS RMX16 "Non-Lin2" program. With this type of reverb you can get away with setting up a very big sounding verb, since it cuts off rather abruptly, preventing the large tails from totally clouding up your drum tracks (especially in faster songs). Be careful with over-doing this type of verb, unless you really like that 80's drum sound.
You can make this type of verb with most plugins that offer a non-linear/gated program, or by putting a gate on any reverb return, triggered by the snare, or entire drum mix, etc. Then just adjust the decay/release of the gate to work with the tempo of the song.
You can make this type of verb with most plugins that offer a non-linear/gated program, or by putting a gate on any reverb return, triggered by the snare, or entire drum mix, etc. Then just adjust the decay/release of the gate to work with the tempo of the song.
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- KVRist
- 292 posts since 25 Dec, 2003 from Bay Area, CA, USA
BTW if you feel like spending an ass-load of money, the TC Electronics verbs for Powercore are worth investigating. The DVR2 verb is an EMT250 simulation, and the Non-Lin verb obviously does the gated/inverse reverb thing.
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- KVRAF
- 1933 posts since 29 Apr, 2005 from Beyond all space, time, and dimension.
Hate to raise hackles but Princeton Digital 2016 has a great percussion setting.
Here is my small version:
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PLEASE VISIT www.thehungersite.com DAILY AND CLICK THE LINKS. THEY DONATE MONEY TO CHARITY BASED ON AD INCOME. IT'S FREE!
- KVRAF
- 2750 posts since 2 Feb, 2005 from Raincoast of Grayland
Hackle-raising Heckler! 
I haven't tried the 2016 on drums yet. Thanks for the idea, Mr. Fripper!
I haven't tried the 2016 on drums yet. Thanks for the idea, Mr. Fripper!
perception: the stuff reality is made of.
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- KVRian
- 769 posts since 2 Apr, 2005
The 2016 is good for small rooms, and small rooms are good for natural sounding drums. (Took me a while to appreciate the 2016's strength, when the presets display it's overwhelming weakness at larger rooms).
For some real hackle-raising - if you want to experiment with inverse reverbs on percussion (and why wouldn't you?) grab the demo from www.artsacoustic.com and hear for yourself. Experiment with the 7 different algorithms - I tend to like the Small or Fast ones for drums, but try them all.
For some real hackle-raising - if you want to experiment with inverse reverbs on percussion (and why wouldn't you?) grab the demo from www.artsacoustic.com and hear for yourself. Experiment with the 7 different algorithms - I tend to like the Small or Fast ones for drums, but try them all.
