@Holgmeister said:
@LGeist110 said:
To make dry libraries like the VI Series sound like a room, you need a convolution reverb, not an algorithmic one
This is a very shortcoming answer. The choice of reverb depends on what you want to achieve. If you want as a result a famous chamber concert or symphony, than an convolution reverb catering to orchestral rooms is great and then MIRPRO3D is unmatched in results.
If you have a mix that is hybrid, with synth, other samples or close-by voices like singers than an "algorithmic" reverb can be the better choice. It needs experimenting and a lot of reverb plugins to compare. One of my first Go-To Reverb next to MIR3D is a plate reverb. In very small doses, it makes any instrument sound like you sit close by but it still resonates. Then I go through more traditional reverbs to hybrid and experimental ones like Arturia Fragments.
If it still sounds bad, use "Valhalla Shimmer" - this makes every sound sounding great, until the last echo fades out. π
My tip for the most uncommon reverb is Wave's Abbey Road Echo Chamber: It bringes the last symphony orchestra back to the roots and even today sounds surprisingly different. It also teaches you how - in the old days - reverb was done the "old school" way.
So, the usual answer is : It all depends - what you want to achieve.
And to come back to the original topic of VI instruments: The base of all these possibilities is to have absolutely dry sounds so that the choice of virtual rooms is yours. .
I do orchestral music, so I need a concert hall sound. I have Spaces reverb (original edition). I can also use the Bricasti impulses. I also have Flexverb for a good algo.
What I've been doing is using the Flexverb on a bus, and using sends. Pretty decent results, but the dry VI instruments do sound too prominent.
I see two ways I could go here. One is to use the Synchronized Sp. Edition, which has impulses of course. For my GPO inst's, I can use the convo reverb on the Aria Player. And for my Cine Sample inst's, I can use a convo or algo reverb on a bus. (I don't use the Kontakt reverbs, of course).
Two, I could just use Spaces or Bricasti on a bus, and send all the insts there, but instead of algo it would be convo. I think the second method makes more sense.
The kicker is that I would have to redo all of my mixes. Which I probably should do anyway, since my mixing probably breaks all kinds of rules.