Generally, Pre delay setting in reverbs is the setting you use to set how long it takes for the reverb to "sound", its especially noticeable with higher early reflection settings. What you essentially get is "delay time" like you would get in normal delay/tap delay effects. Its just the delayed signal is also reverb.
Horns face away from the conductor. Essentially the sound you hear from horns is from the reverberation. The farther you move away from the front of the orchestra, towards "cheap seats", the more this becomes noticable, as you start to lose actual "placement" of the horns in the mix.
Whats happening is you are hearing the sound of the horns playing towards the back wall, and bouncing off into all directions.
Usually in orchestral recordings you hear the horn sound bounce back pretty quickly of the studio wall. Being that its usually not too far from the players in studio settings, you actually hear precise reflections from teh center of the back wall. Its really noticable on articulations like Stacatto at f/ff and anything that has a bit of power (or in softer sections and short articulations)
Even with baffles set up in a real recording, I'd expec to hear the sound of the horns bounce off any back wall, since they are still pointing that direction. The only time it wouldn't happen is in overdubs in a small room, or if you had a stereo rig hanging not too far above the horns *ONLY*, and no overheads on the orchestra, and no other mics on the
other instruments. Which is why I believe we always got that "direct stereo"
As i mentioned before, I tend to but the horns through its own reverb setting with a pretty short decay, but enough predelay to hear defined early reflections, then I collapse the reverb's "wet" signal to near mono, to simulate the "back wall". Essentially creating a slap back. I tend ot EQ the reverb return as well, but its to taste.
I'm sure Dietz has his own ideas too, he's pretty amazing at what he does. It'd be interesting to see what these guys do in terms of helping VSL users get more variety in their sounds. I know they are very forward thinking and aren't looking at this product as "its flexible its up to you to make it work for you", its more like "Its flexible and we want to help it work for you".
All we can do is support them and feel confident that the end user is someone they intend to help.... and wait [;)]
I still cant believe whats gone into this library. I'm a geek for samples, but these people are mad. The legato instruments alone take 23 times as long as it would take a normal sustain instrument to sample, not to mention the programming, and feature developments.
Horns face away from the conductor. Essentially the sound you hear from horns is from the reverberation. The farther you move away from the front of the orchestra, towards "cheap seats", the more this becomes noticable, as you start to lose actual "placement" of the horns in the mix.
Whats happening is you are hearing the sound of the horns playing towards the back wall, and bouncing off into all directions.
Usually in orchestral recordings you hear the horn sound bounce back pretty quickly of the studio wall. Being that its usually not too far from the players in studio settings, you actually hear precise reflections from teh center of the back wall. Its really noticable on articulations like Stacatto at f/ff and anything that has a bit of power (or in softer sections and short articulations)
Even with baffles set up in a real recording, I'd expec to hear the sound of the horns bounce off any back wall, since they are still pointing that direction. The only time it wouldn't happen is in overdubs in a small room, or if you had a stereo rig hanging not too far above the horns *ONLY*, and no overheads on the orchestra, and no other mics on the
other instruments. Which is why I believe we always got that "direct stereo"
As i mentioned before, I tend to but the horns through its own reverb setting with a pretty short decay, but enough predelay to hear defined early reflections, then I collapse the reverb's "wet" signal to near mono, to simulate the "back wall". Essentially creating a slap back. I tend ot EQ the reverb return as well, but its to taste.
I'm sure Dietz has his own ideas too, he's pretty amazing at what he does. It'd be interesting to see what these guys do in terms of helping VSL users get more variety in their sounds. I know they are very forward thinking and aren't looking at this product as "its flexible its up to you to make it work for you", its more like "Its flexible and we want to help it work for you".
All we can do is support them and feel confident that the end user is someone they intend to help.... and wait [;)]
I still cant believe whats gone into this library. I'm a geek for samples, but these people are mad. The legato instruments alone take 23 times as long as it would take a normal sustain instrument to sample, not to mention the programming, and feature developments.