kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
Then maybe watch more carefully next time?
kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
No prob, you dind't. You only twisted my words. I didn't know that the word "shootout" is a scientific correct term these days. All that I wanted to have expressed in the part of the sencence you quoted was that...Warp69 wrote:Unfortunately I'll have to disappoint you ...
What's impressive about this is beyond me. So I read between the lines and responded it a rather heated way. I want to apologize for that. Cool?Fritze wrote:To me this shootout is sufficient to hear some general characters of the reverbs.
We're totally cool. Please don't be affraid of provoking/criticising us developersFritze wrote:I want to apologize for that. Cool?
I don't need to. No one ever do that. And they won't. You guys clearly don't have a clue about it. I mean at this point it's obvious you never did a live gig mix with real hardware and you are arguing just for the sake of it.jens wrote:kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
Then maybe watch more carefully next time?
+1Warp69 wrote:If we keep the discussions professional and preferable with claims that can be backed up then we all get wiser in the process.
It's called a soundcheck, and you remain wrong no matter how many times you type it.kmonkey wrote:I don't need to. No one ever do that. And they won't. You guys clearly don't have a clue about it. I mean at this point it's obvious you never did a live gig mix with real hardware and you are arguing just for the sake of it.jens wrote:kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
Then maybe watch more carefully next time?
There is a tone session before each concert or live gig. Live engineer need to tune his gear to adapt everything (if needed) to acoustic space. At this point he will make a decision should he change reverb and whatever again if there are corrections needed to process. That is why there is tone session and why this exist at all..solely for that reason. If there are particular sounds which need particular reverb preset then that is already being made in advance in process pipeline and preset is called before song. Like with everything else. These thing are made in advance and rarely there are things being made at realtime. I never seen not a single fool toying with reverb preset just before your next boy bend start their next song. If you are doing live mix like that i wouldn't want to hire you.
Belive me they are not toying with decay or whatever the heck you guys think of it. Live session is not being made of reverb tail being automated inside your clip inside your DAW.
Gimme a break hahaha...
I'm not really sure what your point is here. I did live FOH/monitors for a couple years...It's the mixer's responsibility to make the people onstage sound as good as possible, and if that--God forbid--means turning knobs on a hardware reverb, that's what the job entails.kmonkey wrote:I don't need to. No one ever do that. And they won't. You guys clearly don't have a clue about it. I mean at this point it's obvious you never did a live gig mix with real hardware and you are arguing just for the sake of it.jens wrote:kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
Then maybe watch more carefully next time?
Well, not all developers are as cool as you about citicism. But that's OK. Devs are normal humans. And we all have our strengths and weaknesses.Warp69 wrote:We're totally cool. Please don't be affraid of provoking/criticising us developersFritze wrote:I want to apologize for that. Cool?(this obviosly goes for every one including developers) I hope we, developers, all thrive on feedback in order to make our products, the best products they can be. If we keep the discussions professional and preferable with claims that can be backed up then we all get wiser in the process.
For reverbs I seldom tried to bring the characteristics into lotsa words. But you asked for it, so OK. My descriptions are based on these audios. This means that I don't take into account any number of parameters but only what I hear in these examples. Besides of me knowing VintageVerb quite well as I own and love it a lot. And yes, this was supported by the price and the no ilok condition. But it easily stood the test of time. I still like it a lot. Just for the record: I don't simply like things because they are free or cheap. There are a lot of things that are free/cheap that I absolutely don't like. And there are quite a few expensive things I definitely WANT.Warp69 wrote:I would appreciate if you were able to list some of the general characteristics of the mentioned plugins (please keep in mind some of the plugins have 20+ parameters per algorithm, which might equal over 100 parameters in total). Maybe the presets from the other plugins can be posted?
I would very much like to answer this question, but I can't. I general dislike plugins for various reasons and I haven't tested every plugin in the known universe - I have a limit experience regarding reverb plugins.toothnclaw wrote:in your opinion, which reverb plugin in the known universe blends best with the source material? And why is it better in this than others?
Ummm...Wasn't it enough clear that i wasn't quoting you ??Winstontaneous wrote:I'm not really sure what your point is here. I did live FOH/monitors for a couple years...It's the mixer's responsibility to make the people onstage sound as good as possible, and if that--God forbid--means turning knobs on a hardware reverb, that's what the job entails.kmonkey wrote:I don't need to. No one ever do that. And they won't. You guys clearly don't have a clue about it. I mean at this point it's obvious you never did a live gig mix with real hardware and you are arguing just for the sake of it.jens wrote:kmonkey wrote: I never seen any engineer making changes to reverb on live concert EVER in my life.
Then maybe watch more carefully next time?
Especially at multi-act festivals, a sound check is just a line check to make sure all the signals are behaving. Then you use your ears, hands, fingers, and other necessary body parts to dial in the best sound. There are rules of thumb to follow, but every venue sounds different when it's filled with people--so your empty-venue "tone session" settings are subject to change.
Neither do I - it's obviously possible to get way more diffusion than what is demonstarted - I have no idea why such setting was chosen compared to the other reverbs. Maybe Beatworld can answer that.Fritze wrote:My guess is that the reverb on the sidestick could have been as diffuse as I would have liked it. I don't like such strong transients with such echoey reverbs.
Indeed, and not every song needs the same reverb setting...Winstontaneous wrote:but every venue sounds different when it's filled with people
The irony is killing me right now!kmonkey wrote: I mean at this point it's obvious you never did a live gig mix with real hardware and you are arguing just for the sake of it.
There is a tone session before each concert or live gig. Live engineer need to tune his gear to adapt everything (if needed) to acoustic space. At this point he will make a decision should he change reverb and whatever again if there are corrections needed to process. That is why there is tone session and why this exist at all..solely for that reason. If there are particular sounds which need particular reverb preset then that is already being made in advance in process pipeline and preset is called before song. Like with everything else. These thing are made in advance and rarely there are things being made at realtime. I never seen not a single fool toying with reverb preset just before your next boy bend start their next song. If you are doing live mix like that i wouldn't want to hire you.
Belive me they are not toying with decay or whatever the heck you guys think of it. Live session is not being made of reverb tail being automated inside your clip inside your DAW.
Gimme a break hahaha...
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