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On 21 jul 2006, at 20.00, rune fagereng wrote: > On some of Jon Hassells tunes, his trompetsound has a near and > close direct sound, and just a small amout of his sound (lets say > 20%) has a big reverb, I think. The part that has reverb, also has > some delay, I think. But there are no delay on the direct sound, I > think.... > > I play guitar, with the use of TC 2290 for delay, and a Alesis for > reverb. The Alesis is in the fx-chain of the Tc. > > Any Thoughts of how to get "closer" to the Hassells sound, in the > manner of getting reverb just on the delays ? Or any tips what so > ever ? Hi Rune, This post may not be relevant for your recent setup but I think it's a good tip, so I'm posting it anyway. I found out about it when using Ableton Live as the mixer for my EDP, other hardware machines and some software looping plug-ins. The point is that if you simply send part of your signal to a huge reverb (or delay, or both) it may quickly smear out the music so it becomes lame. The trick is to punctuate the reverb (in the effect loop) with short time segments of the audio that is going constantly. Then the listener can follow that note flying away towards the horizon on those beautiful clouds of reverb. Hassel often uses a freeze reverb for that; i.e. a reverb that keeps the last input audio frozen until new audio is coming (pretty clear you can't feed such a reverb with a constant guitar mangling? ;-) So, one of the important steps here is to find a way to open up the effect send for just a short time. On a physical mixer you can do that with mute buttons on the busses. You may also set up foot pedals to open and close. But the method I like to use with Live is to create an empty "dummy" clip (audio or midi loop with no content) and then draw some suitable "Clip Envelopes" for the Effect Send Knog on that loop. This way you can many (alternative) loops of different lengths that only spin for the purpose of opening up the Effect Send on short 16th note (or whatever) durations every now and then. When working with Live there is a very good Freeze Verb preset coming with the built-in reverb (my overall fav verb. IMHO much cooler than any impulse response reverb). First I thought this tip was too off topic, because you do not use Live, but then I ran into an interview with Jeff Rona where he speaks about this same technique with Live. And Rona has been working with Hassel so he's definitely into that vibe. Here's the article: http://www.ableton.com/pages/artists/jeff_rona Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se (Swedish) www.looproom.com (international) http://tinyurl.com/fauvm (podcast) http://www.myspace.com/looproom