![Love :love:](./images/smilies/icon_love.gif)
i'm patiently waiting for the new version of Dronebox that Oli Larkin should announce one of these future days...
I'm a big fan of these tuned delay lines that still have many uncharted territories IMO
![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)
Yep.hibidy wrote:Anyone else feel they don't really understand ubermod?
You can do already something similar in any host that will allow a feedback loop which should be most of them. I've been doing it for ages. The exact setup depends on your host but...LX_Nen wrote:I want a hosting delay.
It's pretty simple, it's just got a delay time, some panning, and empty slots for whatever VST/AU I want to iteratively apply to the sound.
Gee, thanks for reminding me about the best delay plugin in the history of the known universe who ran off and left me alone and crying, Spektral Delay. I'm going to be singing Jimmy Reed songs all day.Krakatau wrote:Sorry if it might sound perhaps a bit insisting, but i'm persuaded that for instance, delay-based resonators FX are still of an underexploited area
For single instruments as well as send/return MIDI controlled effect into the mix when intelligently configured to enhance chords , harmonies and scales
This is my preferred method of doing dubby delays. Always use a limiter! It can save when you're fast enough to pull back the seedback (ie. send level to itself). A nice sounding limiter can also be a good replacement for overdrive as the gradual squash distorts it. I often still use feedback of the plug-in itself, which lessens the effect of whatever other effect is in the send feedback path (like a filter).toast wrote:You can do already something similar in any host that will allow a feedback loop which should be most of them. I've been doing it for ages. The exact setup depends on your host but...LX_Nen wrote:I want a hosting delay.
It's pretty simple, it's just got a delay time, some panning, and empty slots for whatever VST/AU I want to iteratively apply to the sound.
Put a delay on a send with feedback set to 0 and wet/dry set to 100% wet. Then follow it with the plugin of your choice, I often like sample rate reducers, and then send the output back to the delay send. That send control is now your feedback control.
BUT START SLOW! Things can get seriously out of control if you start indiscriminately cranking the feedback to 11. I take no responsibility for lost limbs or your wife complaining about all her appliances being out on the lawn.
I hadn't heard many of these. I'm looking at a few YouTube videos. That's a pretty cool sound.xybre wrote:I haven't been able to find a good oil can delay anywhere. I'd really like something that could at least optionally emulate that scratchy, dirty, cyclic, vibrato-y sound.
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