Which 90s Snare Reverb is this ?
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- KVRian
- 1078 posts since 24 Apr, 2008 from USA
Which reverb unit and type of reverb is this on the snare ?
and also there is some snare sample alternating with live snare in the chorus, from which unit can it be ? perhaps Roland R8 ?
and also there is some snare sample alternating with live snare in the chorus, from which unit can it be ? perhaps Roland R8 ?
Main Computer Specs: MacBook M1 Max, 32GB, 4TB, Cubase 13.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1078 posts since 24 Apr, 2008 from USA
yes everyone is an expert here until you ask them to try and identify a certain a certain sound
Main Computer Specs: MacBook M1 Max, 32GB, 4TB, Cubase 13.
- KVRAF
- 2067 posts since 8 Feb, 2013 from Switzerland
I hear a compressed then gated very dense, fast build up plate type reverb. Gives the snare more sustain, this typical whoosh characteristic.
In addition: Source for the overall more distant, roomy sounding drum kit are the natural stereo room mics.
In addition: Source for the overall more distant, roomy sounding drum kit are the natural stereo room mics.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1078 posts since 24 Apr, 2008 from USA
Thank you so much that's very helpful alreadyEtienne1973 wrote: Wed Nov 13, 2024 10:20 pm I hear a compressed then gated very dense, fast build up plate type reverb. Gives the snare more sustain, this typical whoosh characteristic.
In addition: Source for the overall more distant, roomy sounding drum kit are the natural stereo room mics.
Main Computer Specs: MacBook M1 Max, 32GB, 4TB, Cubase 13.
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- KVRist
- 464 posts since 25 Sep, 2002 from Chicago
It sounds like the drums are all programmed samples anyway. Not exactly organic or "real" feeling. I do a truckload of acoustic drum recordings. IMO: Most any large studio convolution reverb will get you close and then you can add a bit of gated plate to give it more body.
The real trick is getting that snare sound. It's a sample so you could find the sample somewhere. Kind of reminds me of how piccalo snares were used on some grunge. It has a tighter pop. A real snare takes quite a bit of messing with to get that sound. Saturation, clipping and quite a bit of EQ.
The real trick is getting that snare sound. It's a sample so you could find the sample somewhere. Kind of reminds me of how piccalo snares were used on some grunge. It has a tighter pop. A real snare takes quite a bit of messing with to get that sound. Saturation, clipping and quite a bit of EQ.
