Abbey Road Reverb Technique - Into The Lair
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Dave shows a simple technique (sometimes known as the Abbey Road Studios reverb technique) that delivers fantastic-sounding, lush reverb. Do you use this technique when mixing? Let us know how!
Hat tip to Bobby Owsinski with his original description of the technique here: bobbyowsinski.blogspot.com/201...
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Пікірлер: 230
Thanks Dave. Something I do with long reverbs is stick a compressor before the reverb. This helps to tame loud peaks hitting the reverb, and when dealing with long reverbs, particularly ambient music where the reverb is up in the mix, you don't want huge peaks activating the reverb that might swamp the mix.
That saturation/drive thing really gives it that air that one seeks so desperately
I've been using EQ before my reverb for years, a technique taught to me by my dad, but that Saturn adds some magic! Never would have thought to use that before a reverb. Great tip, thanks Dave!
This sound can be acheived with using the Waves Manny Marrouqiun Reverb plugin. It's lush, with a nice compressor, eq , phaser shifter, and distortion.. All the things this video expalined, but withing one plugin..
Soloing the reverb at the end was very helpful - it was VERY clear what the EQ cuts and saturation were doing.
"What I like, a boat uuuuu" Amazing difference mr. Pensado, just absolutely impeccable work.
@allenau8379
8 жыл бұрын
The vocal performance killed the video for me. I couldn't finish watching.
Don't bother reading the comments section on this particular video. Usually I get something out of it ...this time, the video is all you need.
Hi Dave - I've been working all night on my orchestral mixes with vocals, but logged on to my laptop and into KZread to say a massive thank you!!!! Honestly, this video helped so so so much. When I mix vocals dry and get the EQ and tone I want using the right compressors. But then when I add reverbs, despite how good they are, the vocals always became murkier unless the level is so minimal that you can't even notice or appreciate the reverb. I then try your reverb EQ tricks and the FabFilter Saturn and the difference is night and day!!! Thank you sooooooooooo much for these videos. I truly appreciate everything you do and have learnt so much from Pensado's Place over the years. The interview with Jack Joseph Puig was life changing for me - would be great to see him on then again sometime soon. You guys rock, thanks a million! Joseph
So just what is the "Abbey Road Reverb" technique ? This guy's all over the place horsing around with endless EQ possibilities, and NO mention of Abbey Road throughout the video ! I'll tell you what it is. Plate reverbs, etc. don't like low end (Bass drums, etc.) or high end (overtones, etc.) so in the old days we rolled off at the 600 Hz. point and below, and 5K or above on the high end. Now you know.
@heavymetalmixer91
6 жыл бұрын
I tend to vary the LPF between 3K and 6K depending on how agressive or smooth the song is.
@jordanseah
6 жыл бұрын
you should start your own channel to tell us this in 5 minutes.
@WillieMCruz
5 жыл бұрын
At the very beginning if you listen to what he says , he mención Bobby owsinsky even says go check it up, if you do it you will find out the answer to your questions.
@WillieMCruz
5 жыл бұрын
William Palminteri the whole video it’s about the abbey road trick
@alchmymusic5259
5 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
That was amazing. I used to struggle with lo-fi reverbs for ages, never getting anywhere near a natural sound. Got a few good ones (one with built in frequency filters) by now. At last, I know why and how to operate them. Thank you indeed!
Absolutely awesome! Totally changed my way of looking at and using reverb. Cheers!
Dave, thank you so much! It was a golden tip to me. Greatly appreciate your sharing.
You just explain things in such a natural way. That's what I like about youuuuuu.
I like how you take the time and really go through what you're doing. A lot of videos are good but they run through things too fast and don't really dig into a whole lot. You take it slow and really pull it apart, and you show how you experiment instead of just giving a final "here's what you can do".
You're awesome. Thank you SO much for making these videos. Such an incredible resource. Cheers!
You are so good at explaining the process and details-- thanks.
Awesome, now I have a name for what I´m doing for so long - thanks Dave!
Incredible techniques I was trying at the same time I listened to the videos. Damn, it makes some really nice things !
great video as always Dave :) this channel is so so helpful, cheers!
great tutorial Dave, I really got a lot from this one, thankyou
Great video. I have typically made adjustments post verb so this gives me a lot to play with. Thanks Dave
@paukin9344
5 жыл бұрын
Chris Nix try low-pass before the reverb and hi-pass after. The reverb algorithm can sound different depending on the input and I find it gains a bit more clarity this way,especially with less subtle sounds
After I learned about it from you I use it all the time for every singing vocal
This was a very helpful segment. Thanks for showing us these educational items, I always enjoy your ITL. Cheers from Canada eh :-) Bruce
Wad I like a boat you
@LoboRyuzaki
6 жыл бұрын
is that the girl from the free voice samples on FL? hahahah
@allkindsofthings673
5 жыл бұрын
Wad I like a above you
@InsaneCarville
5 жыл бұрын
Would I like to boat you?
@recmydream
5 жыл бұрын
it reminded me when someone write a comment to "Creed" music video which actually called "My Sacrifice" but in funny version of commenter it was "my sack of rice"
@hankweaverston2968
5 жыл бұрын
At least she didn’t say choo
DAVE , i love your video's man Solid information ,
Bobby is awesome and a really great guy too.
I love the bit where he says he doesn’t mean to be condescending but he’s so right it does take time for your ears to learn how to hear these things
Well, 5 years a go I didnt hear it all that much. Today I heard it fine (same monitors) Thanks for the tips!
Thanks a lot Dave Pensado!
thanks Dave! you are certainly a perfectionist!
I love this. You rock.
Thank you so much Dave!!!
Thank you!! Great insights!!
Enlightening! Very clear instruction
Thx dave you're my mentor !
Great tip Thanks Dave!
that high pass really made the vocal sound more emotional, and also of course more clarity
4:02 - very nice. The voice already becomes clearer and the reverb more apparent. It sounds like there is more "breath" in the mix.
wow, I am using this technique!
Good stuff Dave
I really liked the HP filter without the LP filter or tube emulation. Great examples!
dat smile at 10:02 when he activate the saturn. Priceless. How to sell a plugin. Where is my mastercard?
@DeepSociety
8 жыл бұрын
+Francesco Bonalume this is passion :-) he maybe has the same look to his face when his wife puts away her bra...
@RossCooperMusic
8 жыл бұрын
haha
@Ojini
5 жыл бұрын
I thought I was the only one who noticed it😊
@scrummyvision
4 жыл бұрын
saturating the input to the reverb just blew my mind i love saturn!!!!
Getting rid of "sewer pipe" effect is awesome advice that has not reached quite some of live guys. Yet, it is so simple and easy to do.
I quite honestly thought everyone did this. Was one of the first things I learned about setting up reverb sends. Roll off the highs and the lows before the signal hits the reverb. As soon as I set up a reverb send I set up HPF at 500-600Hz and LPF at around 9-10kHz (sometimes lower). The only time I don't do this is if it's a thick, dense, deep reverb on a solo synth part in a sparse mix - sometimes that low end mud can sound great in the verb. But as soon as you're putting other instruments in the mix, roll off that low end before the reverb!
@Fatherjohn76
5 жыл бұрын
Yeah always been my way too, never thought this was a "secret" just standard practice. Though I actually roll off only up to about 300 then put a gentle shelf 3-4dB cut up to 900 or so. Removes the rubbish but keeps some warmth in. Never fails me
@zachary963
4 жыл бұрын
Everyone HAS always done it, it’s just that Abby Road did it first. And they did it harshest, hp at 600 and lp at 1k. Very dramatic.
@emanuel_soundtrack
3 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is like doing a video like Clean your Mix with this Abbey Road trick: cut the unnecessary low frequences from background instruments
"that's kinda' cool...".
0:56 keep clicking it lol i love this man
So, pass-filters and equalizing... I already did that because a lot of reverb-plugins have pass-filters or equalizers built into them. Put one and one together, and I already figured it was technique when I started out. - The reason it helps is the same principle as equalizing; You prevent the same frequencies to stack up and you prevent it from becoming muddy or crowded in certain frequencies.
Really great! Tnx a lot
Great video, thank you! Like distortion on a way to the reverb.
"What I like...about you!" Thank you for once again giving a tremendously helpful video. You look good Dave! Do you take internships?
A tip to do with fabfilter Saturn. Send park of vocal to a buss and use the "boutique" preset and adjust to your taste but the main thing is the sound. When you load that preset you will understand instantly. Got this tip from a tutorial on image lines channel. Saturn is free to download with a 30 day trial btw
I would have never thought of cutting some of the mids and using saturation on the reverb. It was subtle but it made the reverb more clear and pronounced
This one is cool!
I enjoyed that with and without reverb the track had reverb. This line will haunt my dreams.
Bobby Owsinski is awesomski
Sometims is needed to worm some cold reverb. But I've never tought about saturation on verb)) All cool things are easy! Thanks for tip Dave)
At the end I tried to hear the difference with saturation on and off, and tried and tried and I couldn’t. Then I tried to feel it and I got the difference right away! The reverb sounds much fuller and warmer with Saturn.
@scrummyvision
2 жыл бұрын
this is a good tip for mixing in general, i will try to remember that
Gracias dave, muchas gracias, DIOS te bendiga hermano
@tecnica-de-voz
3 жыл бұрын
díselo en Inglés, así te entiende
excellent ideas. can't wait to pimp my reverb now!
WHEN AM I GONNA LEARN WAT SHE LIKES A BOAT MEEE??!????!??
@CrowClouds
3 жыл бұрын
You make her smile when she's sad or something
I was doing the eq and saturation all this time after the reverb, ill do the comparative
Thank you
best tutorial...
That tube plugin worked well put tube sweet warmth in the top end ..nice
Regardless of the reverb plug I'm using - Eventide, Lexi, T-Racks, Waves...or even "stock" DAW verbs; I rarely keep anything over 4k on the verb's EQ, (sometimes even lower than that). But, the reverb I typically use for the style that I produce is more subtle than what others will use...I'm personally not a fan of bright, crispy-sounding reverb). I also rely quite a bit on the pre-delay of a verb; I don't always want the reverb to respond ( happen) at the exact same time as the dry track. I've been able to get really nice results, using very "deep" reverb, by adjusting the pre-delay ( mostly based on song tempo, 60,000(ms) divided by the project BPM will give you the quarter note value, at which point you can divide that in half to get 8th, or divide again to get 16th note... or even 32nd note values for reverb response time) and using the Effect ( aux) return level, tucked way back; keeps the intimacy of dry track without the reverb "getting in the way". It also helps - A LOT - to have a great-sounding front end to begin with (mic, pre, room, converters) as many people will often use reverb too heavily in an attempt to "mask" the sound of cheaper gear. The better your front-end is, the better your recording quality, and the nicer your added effects will sound ... and quite often, the less effect you'll need to use. I'm sure Dave doesn't have that particular problem, as I'd be willing to bet that he's not using a $70 Behringer mic and $89 Tascam preamp. I'm sure his front end is top notch, as are the tracks he receives for mixing from other studios. IMO, of course.
Subtle is good…thanks Dave.
beautifulness
i like this guy
So you effect the signal going into it not the reverb itself? Thanks I‘ll try it out.
Many Thx
dave, u r a bad, bad man.
that chair seems comfy, mind sharing what type it is? I am not 100% happy with my aeron
So basically it's Pultec bass EQ trick except it's on mid-high frequency. I could imagine cutting off some high frequency would leave up spaces for other stuffs contribute the shimmeries that we needed which vocal reverb just won't work as that good. Nice tips.
I used to have a couple of the old Langevin (passive) 2-band "cassette" EQs - which were AWESOME on guitars, but were also quite useful on the aux sends to 'verb for just this purpose. Bottom line, I guess I was using "Abbey Road Reverb" before I even knew what it was! Also, nice of you to vindicate DVERB (to some extent). It may not sound particularly like a natural space - the way that Bricasti and Quantec do - but's that doesn't make it a BAD reverb. All 'verbs are useful in one context or another!
Really Helpful. :)..
I'd like to see what you can do to your reverbs and perhaps delays with diamond color eq
I like this guy he is very, very informative, and experience, of course, counts no doubt. You can tell he has been doing this for decades and must practically live in that studio. I love "old salts" like this I can just envision them eating a cheeseburger and having a coke while mixing. The only thing is he probably should get out more and get some exercise to be more healthy, ha, ha, ha. Otherwise, he's great.
Are that McDSP plugin still available or it has been upgraded? Nice video by the way. That voice sound like pure honey when you do your thing.
That eq ing out of the mids is a greaaaatttt ideaaaa. Man oh man. I’m guessing you wanna eq out parts slightly where the range of the vocal is no ??? Just a thought. In addition to any metallic spots perhaps like you say
I was hoping that "Abbey Road Reverb" refers to the big Abbey Road 60's sound of instruments miked closely and panned all the way to one side, and bleeding to a far mic, which is panned all the way to the other side, creating an amazing spatial effect and a wall of sound, which is heard on The Zombies' "Oracle and odyssey", among many other albums of the era. Can you give a hint of how to do that kind of a reverb in a DAW?
@noisetalgia5753
8 жыл бұрын
Create a reverb send track, pan it how you wish, send it to the desired track which is panned to the opposite side. That should do it
@avivaben
8 жыл бұрын
Thanks Peter! Actually I did just that, but it didn't sound exactly as I wanted it to sound.
good ol d-verb, man...I'm gonna have to break that plugin out again...I've been so busy with valhalla vintage and acon verberate lately that I've almost forgotten how great d-verb actually is for certain things
saturn really is the best saturation plugin
Sir, I understand that, you created a Aux track for the lead vocal. But one question, was it a Mono Aux or Stereo Aux track?
Why you cut lows in eq of verb and added warmth to saturn? Its again adding sm lows..
I don't know why this technique is unique to Abbey Road. Lots of people filter the input signal to Reverbs to make them less obvious. He's rolling off 600 on the front end. Is there even anything near that coming from her voice in the first place? I guess the advantage is getting rid of the crap of her moving around the mic. Other than cleaning that up, I don't think it's doing anything for her voice.
The Abbey Road reverb trick is on the reverb return channel or on the plug in itself, cut everything below 500hz and everything above 5Khz. Anything else is fooling around. The 500/5000hz trick works. If you start fiddling with it and doing some weird 600Hz and 4000hz cutoff that's not the Abbey Road Reverb Trick anymore.
What i like bout dave hes dope as fuck :)
usefull great
The number of times I've had a horrible problem mix where I've tried everything, only to have everything magically work by putting an EQ on the reverb send is to many to count.
I have an interesting suggestion. Record the vocal with a cassette tape (yes cassette not reel to reel or emulations) then use that as a reverb send. The cassette tape cuts out the highs, saturates it and the speed changes in cassette tape will create variations delays in the reverb along with wow and flutter which is the reason i suggest cassette tape. Haven't tried it out yet,but it's an idea i thought of since recently have been recording with cassete tape as a doubler to mix in. Real pain to work with on long recordings from speed changes though, but sounds great mixed in. Also i have been hearing cassette tape is coming back? kind of sounds like a joke to me,but it a nice effect to mix in instead of recording a whole song with it.
@NoyzyBoyZ3
8 жыл бұрын
+blood lord (Chaotic Sonics) I would be curious to hear the result of that,but I'm just a nobody.
@bloodlord1989
8 жыл бұрын
NoyzyBoyZ3 Might do a demostration on it if it works out well for my vocals.
@NoyzyBoyZ3
8 жыл бұрын
+blood lord (Chaotic Sonics) That would be cool,let me know.
@bloodlord1989
8 жыл бұрын
NoyzyBoyZ3 will do. might try it out tomorrow.
@NoyzyBoyZ3
8 жыл бұрын
+blood lord (Chaotic Sonics) I'll be looking for it.Peace.
So, Pensado mentions applying all reverb effects to the INPUT of the Reverb... In my software, I'm used to applying effects to the Aux send on the reverb channel. I'm presuming this is to the Output. So, how in various DAWs do you set up the effects to feed INTO the reverb? Does this mean setting up an Aux channel with the Effects, and then send that channel to your reverb aux channel? i.e. an Aux feeding an Aux? Or, is there another way? Also, he makes the statement but doesn't explain why. Can anyone explain what the advantage is of applying effects prior to the reverb, rather than after?
@emanuel_soundtrack
3 жыл бұрын
because the reverb will enhance these effects and bring them togheter
great job. reverb is so subjective.
can anyone recommend a serious reverb unit for around $1000? even if its second hand but legendary, i just want a legit reverb unit
Sewer Pipe...... Good One!
You hold me tight!!!
I'd like to work with you sir.
Saturation tutorial pls
you look so funny :D and much more passionate than the other tutorialdudes
@losangulos
6 жыл бұрын
Strate2 he sells sea shells by the sea shore... Yep hes a sales man.
plugin pensado
why insert and not send ? any particular reason ?