

We could just start with a Transient Designer… and you probably should! You could try something like the Universal Audio SPL Transient Designer (the SPL De-Verb is apparently a re-work of this very effect)… and Stillwell Audio (who we’ll be coming to in a moment) have you covered with the rather excellent Transient Monster (1). You may change your mind later down the line… That’s when De-Verb can come in handy – we’re going to attempt to remove a significant amount of the ambience that has been recorded without adversely effecting the quality of the recording.

Of course, the best solution here is to choose a suitable environment to record those drums in, alongside careful selection and placement of microphones but… that’s not always possible. RIGHT – Hamilton Mausoleum WET – Source: Wikipedia Make the room bigger, give it a more intricate structure, and thousands upon thousands of tiny echos will add together to create a slow decay to the sound – reverb… The moment you place the drums in a real room, you are going to get reflections from the room – ambience. Here, there would be no reflections from the walls, ceiling or floor, and you would only hear the attack of the drums and the natural decay from their shells.
WHY DO MY SONY NOISEGATE PLUGINS READ DEMO IN WAVELAB 6 PRO
Also, I’m doing this in Cubase, but this will work in Logic X, Pro Tools, Reaper, Studio One, FL Studio, SONAR – whatever your flavour of DAW…įirstly – what do I mean by De-Verb? Imagine recording Drums in an Anechoic Chamber. No time now to go into Polarity Inversion, Phase Inversion, the differences between them – you want that, read the daddy of articles over on Sound on Sound – Phase Demystified. We’re going to do something along those lines here… so make sure you’re familiar with the operation of the Phase/Polarity invert button -> it’ll look something like this (Orange in this Image). This idea stems from a chat I had with the excellent Bruce Aisher a while back on how Brian Eno (it would be, wouldn’t it )) used phase/polarity inversion during mixing.
