The USA retail for that piece is $ 5995.00 and the A version is the same price. Russ I believe the high quality reverb you are hearing are done with Eventide UltraHarmonizer. http://www.eventide.com/profaud/harm.htm It's around 4-5 grand for the rack. Julian On Tuesday, November 15, 2005, at 03:07PM, Juhana Sadeharju <kouhia@nic.funet.fi> wrote:
Hello. Exactly what device settings are needed for vocal processing as in Time Palace and Unreal? Listen to the When you've been touched by love at the end of Unreal. The vocals are more spacious there. Check also Bougainville for Dieter's french language singing.
I'm looking for one or two device setting which always works for vocals, giving very good Yello quality vocals. If you have such settings in your effects devices/plugins, please both write the settings down and tell me what devices/plugins they are. I will then pick up the manuals of the particular devices from the web and check around.
I have written a free and open source reverb GVerb, and now I would like to tune it up for the perfect vocals.
Juhana -- http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/linux-graphics-dev for developers of open source graphics software
Sort of related to sound processing in general I wanted to bring this to the attention of everyone. Unfortunately it is Windows only based, and you need Winamp, and at least a 1.5 gig CPU, but is cheaper than the "real" thing. This is actually a multi band compressor - limiter - expander processor. Most broadcast radio stations use a device called an "Optimod" which makes them sound loud. However this is more complicated than simple compression, and someone has written a DLL (plugin) for Winamp which can emulate the capabilities. You may also wish to use it to process your own material for listening, or recording even. The basic concept is that is has gain to make the quiet bits louder, split into multiple bands, and is user configurable. The only warning I would say about using and downloading presets, is that if you load a preset, change it then hit SAVE you'll overwrite it. I'm not presenting this is exactly what you are looking for vocal processing, but it may be a tool you'll consider using. Yes I know it is aimed at the broadcasting industry (see the pre-emph for FM) but it could be useful for single source compression effects. It can deal with very complex material. http://www.soundsolution.it/ Look for the links around the presets, you'll see mentions of "optimod" but also heavy compressed, "loud" (and that one works!!). Needs to be loaded in the Winamp directory and renamed from S1 to S99 (drop the zero). Get this, and the presets from the downloads linked from this page. Perhaps another tool you really creative folks will consider using. If you need any help getting started with it email me privately (trickynic AT googemail DOT com) and I'll help. I intend using it to postprocess podcasts... Regards... On 16/11/05, TofP@aol.com <TofP@aol.com> wrote:
The USA retail for that piece is $ 5995.00 and the A version is the same price. Russ
I believe the high quality reverb you are hearing are done with Eventide UltraHarmonizer. http://www.eventide.com/profaud/harm.htm It's around 4-5 grand for the rack.
Julian
-- Regards, Nic. We are the architects, not the victims of our own destiny
Klonk Wed, 16 Nov 2005 12:53:05 +0000 veschprigt mroktar Nic <trickynic@gmail.com> [re: Re: [Yello] Vocal processing?]:
Sort of related to sound processing in general I wanted to bring this to the attention of everyone. Unfortunately it is Windows only based, and you need Winamp, and at least a 1.5 gig CPU, but is cheaper than the "real" thing.
I am pretty sure that Linux Audio Developer's Simple Plugin API (LADSPA) has a DLL wrapper that allows, well, DLLs to be dropped into the LADSPA dir and thereby used with any LADSPA-capable app, such as Ardour, Audacity, Rezound, BEAST, and so on. Gonna go give it a shot - thanks for the tip! --gcr
participants (3)
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Nic -
organism@hydrophilus.com -
TofP@aol.com