Hi everyone,
I'm working on an atmospheric ballad with massive reverbs and slow attack strings, for which I'm using my absolute favourite MIR venue, the Steinhofkirche. I have the reverb time at the full 8 seconds, but the dry/wet offset at -30% as it's mixing the orchestral instruments with much more 'in your face' guitars. I am generating the slow attack swell by raising the velocity crossfade from 50 up to 80 and then back down to 50 for each note, which creates an initial swell then sustained by the reverb while the next note fades in. I have also sometimes raised the attack slider to 30, my first time using it on anything other than 0.
I am using MIR's automation mapping to adjust instrument volumes between verse and chorus sections, and I notice that the level of the reverb tail changes as well. This means that the lush reverb hanging from the last chorus chord suddenly dips as the instrument levels change for the upcoming verse, which sounds very disruptive in the track.
Is there a way that VEP and MIR can be set to adjust instrument levels only, without affecting the reverb level? As if it were a reverb bus plugin, and I was adjusting the send level to the bus rather than the return from it? Currently my VEP template is set up with a MIR plugin for each track, marked (inline), is there another setting there that would work better?
Or would I be better off adjusting the volumes using the CC7 and CC11 controls, which as far as I can tell are pre-reverb and adjust the raw instrument level? Am I simply looking at this the wrong way, treating MIR as a traditional reverb and not the mixing/virtual hall environment solution it truly is?
Many thanks,
Pyre
PS... Also, while looking at the attack slider on VIP for the first time, I noticed a release slider as well. I know the attack slider works by fading in the volume on a sample, could I ask how exactly the release slider works please? Is it that setting the slider at 127 will play back the whole end of the sample, and any lower than that fades it out quicker, and we are simply used to hearing the samples fade out when the slider is set at the default of 63? Or is it that it fades out the end below 63 but boosts it when higher than 63? Or is it more of a time-based algorithm, like the time stretching feature? If its method of operation is confidential, I completely understand not sharing its secrets; I'm just trying to work out what setting to use for the 'real', unaltered sample sound. Mostly out of curiosity, though - I'm used to hearing it set at 63, so I'm probably going to leave it set like that most of the time.
AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-Core 3.59Mhz Processor, 64 GB RAM, Windows 10.0.19045, Cubase 10.5.20, Sibelius 7, VEP 5.4.16181, VIP 2.4.16399, Symphonic Cube, MIR Rooms 1-5, Suite, Choir, Organ, Imperial, Solo Voices, Dimension Strings, Historic Winds, World Winds