...a plug for Eliminating Feedback...for live l2006-03-15T04:15:36+00:00Is there a plug in that is designed or could be side-chained or something like that to reduce feedback. If not it would be nice. Ive been using Brain Spawn Forte and love it for its stability. I dont know if it wold support side chaining.
Or one for recptor....
anyone know or have a inclination? bandasoundhttps://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=11865
Is there a plug in that is designed or could be side-chained or something like that to reduce feedback. If not it would be nice. Ive been using Brain Spawn Forte and love it for its stability. I dont know if it wold support side chaining.
Or one for recptor....
anyone know or have a inclination?
Break it down to this...Smooth R&B/Christian Music is like when your kickin' back with smoke BBQ'd ribs, a cigar, hot sunshine, and cold ice tea!
Somebody asked about this recently. Basically, feedback supression devices suck - and a software one would suck even more. I had a Sabine one for a while - useless, and it totally sucked tone.
This would only be for live use - and the best thing for avoiding feeback for live use is the following:
1/ careful choice of mics. I was using C1000S's in hypercardiod mode. Stupid, stupid, stupid. An SM57 sounded far better and had far less feedback.
2/ careful placement in relation to stage monitors. I was trying to use my PA for monitoring. Put the Front of House speaker at the Front of the House - you won't have feedback if you do that.
3/ a 32 band graphic is far more effective at killing feedback. If you get used to the different notes, you will be familiar with what fader to pull. This is far more effective that waiting for a feedback suppressor to lock onto an annoying feedback ring.
Why would you want your live mics to be routed through a laptop? Safer to record the performance with auxilary feeds from the mic preamps.