To unconscious sound -
EQ, compression and the like is typically applied _before_ reverberation, if you work with the classic Aux-Send-scheme (i.e., the FX-signal is generated from a multitude of "dry" channels and added to them afterwards). - You _could_ use EQ and dynamic processors after the reverb if you would opt for an "Insert FX"-way of adding it to the signal. For professional work, this is not exactly wrong, but certainly unusual.
To Mike Harper -
Uh - the answer is more difficult than actually doing it ... if you're talking about the "Airforce One Theme"-demo on our site, I would have to ask Mr. Jerry Goldsmith (who wrote it), Mr. Herb Tucmandl (who programmed it) and Mr. Mal Luker (who mixed it on his SSL) ...
Maybe you get hold of this stick on the wrong end - but sometimes it helps _a lot_ to have things done by professionals .... 8-/
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
EQ, compression and the like is typically applied _before_ reverberation, if you work with the classic Aux-Send-scheme (i.e., the FX-signal is generated from a multitude of "dry" channels and added to them afterwards). - You _could_ use EQ and dynamic processors after the reverb if you would opt for an "Insert FX"-way of adding it to the signal. For professional work, this is not exactly wrong, but certainly unusual.
To Mike Harper -
Uh - the answer is more difficult than actually doing it ... if you're talking about the "Airforce One Theme"-demo on our site, I would have to ask Mr. Jerry Goldsmith (who wrote it), Mr. Herb Tucmandl (who programmed it) and Mr. Mal Luker (who mixed it on his SSL) ...
Maybe you get hold of this stick on the wrong end - but sometimes it helps _a lot_ to have things done by professionals .... 8-/
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library
/Dietz - Vienna Symphonic Library