@blacklabelmansociety It will sound just like it should. If the left guitar is only playing, it will sound on the left side. The purpose for the dual tracks is really for a clean volume boost. Hope that helps.
@bruno8ibz Yeah I regret not talking about the drums more. It's basically the same method Ola uses. You have your main SD2 track with the MIDI, and then you send that to another bus. The second bus has a massive amount of reverb and compression and it 'sits' under the main track to give it weight. Hope that helps.
That trick you learned from Mastodon really only makes it louder by about 6 db (Less so because you panned them). If the tracks are exactly the same, it has no sonic advantages other than a db boost. It might sound better because everything sounds better at higher volumes.
@MrCrgl A stem is a rendered part of a tune. For instance if I have an entire song done and someone wants the bass stem, I will give them a .wav file of just the bass track. Hope that helps.
i don't get the drum part in mixing ( my english is not that good ) what is paning.. if i understand it correctly you "copy paste" :) all drums ...and one channel is all left and the second is all right...if that is the case wouldn't the cymbals that are, for example, left, be also on the right speaker...sorry for bad english i hope u understood what i was asking
@TheDavke No they wouldn't because stuff in the proverbial center is basically cancelled out. So all you are really doing is making a wider stereo image with the drums.
@fluff191 thanks...i think i understood this :)...however in video u said that u learned this trick from mastodon..since my band is in studio recording it would be very helpfull if u have some link to share on that matter...thanks
@TheDavke Well I learned it from Mastodon when they made the stems for 'Curl Of The Burl' available for download. There were (2) of everything, one panned left and one panned right. SO I just applied that to my stuff. Hope that makes sense!
i thought reaper was basically free?.. But hey i like your mixing and recording alot tho did you learn all by yourself or did you learn from like lessons?
@myguitar856 Yeah Reaper is like $60. Cheap! And I am self taught in all this recording stuff. Just trial and error. Listen to my first record. It sounds like garbage haha Thanks for watching man!
Hey man, thanks for your very enjoyable video's!
Got a question; how do you program your drums?
Gnarkill2k6 1 day ago in playlist Tutorials.
@Gnarkill2k6 I will either modify one of the stock grooves in Superior Drummer or just make one from scratch. All inside the MIDI editor in Reaper.
fluff191 1 day ago
@lyledurand Yes sir !
fluff191 2 weeks ago
do u record the guitars with tonedirect in podfarm to reaper than make a duplicate of the parent track to pan left and right?
lyledurand 2 weeks ago
One of the Best tutorials for sure!!! Thanks a lot and keep up the great work!
panos12gr 2 weeks ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@panos12gr Hey thank YOU for watching man!
fluff191 2 weeks ago
It would be nice to see some more stuff on the bass tracks e.g. Compressor settings etc.
Awesome channel!
Edlamb0306 3 weeks ago in playlist More videos from fluff191
Comment removed
Edlamb0306 3 weeks ago in playlist More videos from fluff191
I want a recording studio in my car now! lol..
PunkZeusRock 3 weeks ago
Awesome videos, man.
First, you pan one guitar 95% left and the other 95% right. Ok;
Then, you finish the track and you pan both 95% left and 95% right. At this moment, when only one guitar is playing, what is its pan?
For example, when just one guitar plays a riff, what is its pan? Middle?
I got a little confused, thanks.
blacklabelmansociety 1 month ago
@blacklabelmansociety It will sound just like it should. If the left guitar is only playing, it will sound on the left side. The purpose for the dual tracks is really for a clean volume boost. Hope that helps.
fluff191 1 month ago
@nOizyGR 2 separate tracks!
fluff191 1 month ago
Do you play both guitar tracks (Left and Right) separately or you just play it once and copy/paste it?
nOizyGR 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
REAPER, fuck yeah!
AttackingTheMindTV 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@TheCoop114 You drag the child track under the track you want to be the parent. A little blue bar appears you thenet go.
fluff191 1 month ago
How do you make a parent track
TheCoop114 1 month ago
could you tell us a little bit more on how you mix the drums to get that sound? it sounds really good!!
bruno8ibz 1 month ago
@bruno8ibz Yeah I regret not talking about the drums more. It's basically the same method Ola uses. You have your main SD2 track with the MIDI, and then you send that to another bus. The second bus has a massive amount of reverb and compression and it 'sits' under the main track to give it weight. Hope that helps.
fluff191 1 month ago
That trick you learned from Mastodon really only makes it louder by about 6 db (Less so because you panned them). If the tracks are exactly the same, it has no sonic advantages other than a db boost. It might sound better because everything sounds better at higher volumes.
Cheers.
JeronimoMora 1 month ago
Comment removed
KTKHarm 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@MrCrgl Awesome glad you dig it man!
fluff191 1 month ago
Excuse my ignorance but what is an "audio stem" ?
MrCrgl 1 month ago
@MrCrgl A stem is a rendered part of a tune. For instance if I have an entire song done and someone wants the bass stem, I will give them a .wav file of just the bass track. Hope that helps.
fluff191 1 month ago
@fluff191 oh, great. By the way I will be using your Superior Drummer patch, it sounds very powerful. Thanks !
MrCrgl 1 month ago
Is the superior drummer plug in an addition to reaper?
buzzsaw63 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
Just wanna say i found this video extremely helpfull, you explain things well and the sound you get is epic. sub'd
willa7xmoose 1 month ago
@willa7xmoose Thanks man!
fluff191 1 month ago
i don't get the drum part in mixing ( my english is not that good ) what is paning.. if i understand it correctly you "copy paste" :) all drums ...and one channel is all left and the second is all right...if that is the case wouldn't the cymbals that are, for example, left, be also on the right speaker...sorry for bad english i hope u understood what i was asking
TheDavke 2 months ago
@TheDavke No they wouldn't because stuff in the proverbial center is basically cancelled out. So all you are really doing is making a wider stereo image with the drums.
fluff191 2 months ago
@fluff191 thanks...i think i understood this :)...however in video u said that u learned this trick from mastodon..since my band is in studio recording it would be very helpfull if u have some link to share on that matter...thanks
TheDavke 1 month ago
@TheDavke Well I learned it from Mastodon when they made the stems for 'Curl Of The Burl' available for download. There were (2) of everything, one panned left and one panned right. SO I just applied that to my stuff. Hope that makes sense!
fluff191 1 month ago
i thought reaper was basically free?.. But hey i like your mixing and recording alot tho did you learn all by yourself or did you learn from like lessons?
myguitar856 2 months ago
@myguitar856 Yeah Reaper is like $60. Cheap! And I am self taught in all this recording stuff. Just trial and error. Listen to my first record. It sounds like garbage haha Thanks for watching man!
fluff191 2 months ago
@neo69hk no you should record guitars fairly quietly. it will allow more headroom for compression later while mixing.
fluff191 2 months ago
Do you have some tips for how to recording the guitar sound louder but don't have cilpping ?
thank you
neo69hk 2 months ago in playlist Tutorials.
@neo69hk compressor.
tango616 2 months ago
realy nice to see that u care of the youtubers that waches you!! your mixes are great!! thx for sharing!!
GabRock91 2 months ago
@lagiator haha to each his own!
fluff191 2 months ago
I don't really like your mixes but it's awesome that you're giving those information for free ;)
lagiator 2 months ago
how do you write the drums? cheers!
nikitofin 2 months ago
@nikitofin I either modify something from the 'Grooves' or just plot the hits manually. Depends on what I am going for.
fluff191 2 months ago
@fluff191 directly from reaper? sorry my english is native
nikitofin 2 months ago
@nikitofin Yes all within Reaper. I just click the plug-in for SD and go inside it like I do the video. You just drag the MIDI on over to the DAW.
fluff191 2 months ago
@fluff191 but that MIDI, was created in reaper? please sorry for my english again!!
nikitofin 2 months ago