Wich Kind of reverd is that ?

Micha

New member
Hello,

i'm searching, since a long time a special reverb that sounds like in the followings examples.

It's not a hall reverb, i suppose spring ?
Anyway, it's the kind of reverb that absolutely perfect for solo playing (for me).
The particularity is that you hear the reverb everytime, not only when a note is sustaining. (i don't know if you know what i mean... ? :onder: )

Wich kinb is that ?

pride and glory: horse called war
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qa8wueML-0k

thanks
 
Re: Wich Kind of reverd is that ?

The particularity is that you hear the reverb everytime, not only when a note is sustaining. (i don't know if you know what i mean... ? :onder: )

Reverberation is actually more noticeable when the instrument to which it is being applied is not sustaining.

Spring reverb tends to be splashy in response to sharp transients. Natural hall reverb tends to be dense, making individual short notes indistinguishable from one another. Somewhere between lies plate reverb.

For recordings such as those of Zak Wylde, the likeliest choice would have been digital reverb from a top quality studio device. e.g. Lexicon.

There is one Lexicon preset that actually does leave the reverb tail hanging indefinitely whilst the melodic instrument plays over the effect. Even the humble home studio models eventually had it. Some DAW recording software also offers this treatment.
 
Re: Wich Kind of reverd is that ?

To me that sounds like natural reverb of the room, like the mic wasn't against the cab.
 
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