I know there are ways to do this with double delay settings, but man. I wish there was a dedicated mono ADT preset in the output section.
~Troy
I know there are ways to do this with double delay settings, but man. I wish there was a dedicated mono ADT preset in the output section.
~Troy
I know there are ways to do this with double delay settings, but man. I wish there was a dedicated mono ADT preset in the output section.
~Troy
Yup, this request had gained some traction previously, then it just petered out.
Time to throttle it up again.
~Troy
yes, pretty please
No double tracker! I already have the stereo Mimiq.
I might be stupid for asking this . But what does this do to the sound? Is it a stereo feeling or more a delay kinda feeling? Or?
hmmmm....it's thicker than thin, but not so far out that it's in?
That made me exactly equally as wise as before I asked
I might be stupid for asking this . But what does this do to the sound? Is it a stereo feeling or more a delay kinda feeling? Or?
It creates another mono guitar signal track that is sent to the opposite channel using a variable delay and an algorythm to boost and cut notes from the original signal to make it sound like two separate guitarist are playing in stereo. It is a technique used to give the guitar space in the mix and a thicker sound. You can double-track, tri-track, quad-track, etc. to get as thick as you want but you have to watch out for muddying up the guitar sound with too many tracks.
You can also double track on a mono signal too. It's not as noticeable as a stereo track but can help a solo stand out better in a mix.
You can double-track, tri-track, quad-track, etc. to get as thick as you want but you have to watch out for muddying up the guitar sound with too many tracks.
You can also double track on a mono signal too. It's not as noticeable as a stereo track but can help a solo stand out better in a mix.
I totally understand you are trying to help. These points are a tad debatable though