Recording 2nd pass - when to use it?

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sharpdion23
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2012/10/09 15:01:44 (permalink)

Recording 2nd pass - when to use it?

I was watching this video on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DVJ3Z0oiFU&feature=related 

They recorded the same guitar part twice panning them l&r. Is it always a good idea to do that to make the guitar sound more full?

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    Rick O Shay
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/09 17:21:18 (permalink)
    It's a pretty common practice to record more than one pass of the same instrument or vocal part. Sometimes the parts are panned apart to make the sound bigger, sometimes the parts are stacked together to make the sound thicker. Is it always a good idea? It depends on what sounds good in the song. If you can, go ahead and record multiple passes. At mix time you'll have the option of using them or not.
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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/09 17:34:05 (permalink)
    Ok a few questions.

    1. When do you not use this technique? (bass guitars and drums?)

    2. Does it make the mix muddier?

    3. By common practice...Most of the time do you do double passes for let's say a guitar and stack it or pan them differently?

    4. How many passes is too much being stacked or panned?

    Thanks

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    Jeff Evans
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/09 20:41:51 (permalink)
    That is a good question and I think one answer might be that there is no correct number of overdubs. It really depends a lot on what it is being used for.

    In a country tune two rhythm acoustic guitar parts will sound very nice and quite big when panned. A lot depends on the timing of the two in terms of how large an image is created after doing it. Three and four might be starting to sound too messy and can clutter things up a bit in a mix for sure. 

    But there are times also when a large number of overdubs works well. I have often created massive drum phrases by overdubbing my floor tom playing a phrase but doing it many times and tuning the drum also in between each overdub. You can do this 16 or 20 times and it sounds massive and quite spectacular. Being the player of all of the overdubs means a very similar timing and feel can be applied if you want or I tend to mix that up and alter the groove on each one resulting in a wider massive tom hits and phrases. These are handy in large soundscape soundtrack for film promo type tracks. Panning all these drums around the sound field makes them sound huge also. 

    With other instruments it might only be 4 or 5 overdubs eg strings etc..

    The more you do you then the more complex and busy the resultant combination of all those overdubs are. There are times when you need a lot of them and others when just those two acoustic guitars will do and even then one might sound a little better as well.

    You must be prepared to mute tracks and take things out of your music. 

    Enya did many vocal overdubs to get the sounds she was working with like 180 + tracks but after a while it starts to sound like something else rather than a vocal ensemble. And that is a good thing too. And also when gets that big it ends up all going through a buss and being processed and considered as just one musical part. But what a great part it might be though.





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    timidi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/09 20:51:54 (permalink)
    Doubling a part will tend to make the part loose impact.
    Then again, some styles may call for this. It basically depends on what sounds good to you.
    You could quadruple the part if that's what floats your boat.
    Actually, I would disregard this video. It was pretty stupid.


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    ChuckC
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/09 23:42:15 (permalink)
    As you can tell Sharpdion.... it is very subjective and decisions need to be made depending on what you are going for. You tend to get more distinction and clarity out of a single track or fewer tracks, If you are talking a heavy power chorded hard rock chorus then 2,4,6 passes of rhythm guitars usining different guitars, Eqs, mic placements, etc. can really help fatten up the sound. tiny timing variations help the effect. Big variations & sloppy performances will create a muddy mess. Try it & see what YOU think!

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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 00:40:59 (permalink)
    Thanks for all the responses.

    So really it comes down to what type of sound needed for the project. Its a choice between clarity, crisp/thin sound vs full fat/thick sound?

    Timidi - Would you care to explain what is wrong with the video? 

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    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 06:21:43 (permalink)
    Agree with Jeff and Chuck on this one. It's really subjective, but pretty much a necessity in my opinion with certain styles of music. For some things, a single instrument recorded right with that "up close and personal" sound is all you need. The intimacy it brings into the mix is what makes it literally have more impact for THAT particular situation.

    The only thing about the video that I didn't like was the tracking part. Trust me when I tell you, on that second pass, if you smash your foot on the floor that hard, a mic like the Nuemann is going to pick that up to where you'll need to re-record the track. So I questioned if that really was in real time. I also have not had luck in all my years shooting a mic at a sound-hole. That said, those are my only issues with the video really. The technique and it's use is spot on. Oh yeah, he also made a mention of messing with timing. The whole thing about creating a doubled part IS about the timing not being quite spot on. This is what gives you "Stereo". If it's too perfectly lined up, it will give you a mono type sound and you actually lose some stereo spread.

    I personally like to double track electric guitars and acoustic guitars. But I also like the sound of an X/Y mic rig on an acoustic too. Electrics in rock seem to just have a little extra something when you double track them. As for when to do this...it depends on the style of music as well as what YOU feel you need. I'd never double track drums, piano or bass. To me there is just no reason to do so yet there are no rules that state "you shouldn't."

    Certain instruments react to this technique differently and you also have to keep in mind that some aren't really focal points. If you double tracked a bass, it would have to be for a bass oriented album. Bass to me is a filler instrument and doesn't need to shine from a doubled part. However, when we record bass, it is a good rule of thumb to record the sound the bassist likes as well as taking a DI out so you have some other things to work with. You may want to re-amp him or do something to the DI to blend it in. I do the same with electric guitars. Mic up the amps and use a DI as well so if I need to, I can re-amp the sound or run it through a plugin. It's just a safety net really but it can also give you more cool options to work with.

    Drums, you definitely don't want to double track because they are all about timing. Again though, no rules that say you shouldn't. But to me, they make enough noise as is and if you allow for the human timing errors that create stereo to be apparent due to a double tracked drum part, it's just not going to sound good. In my opinion, I like to stay away from any solo instruments as far as doubling goes. I don't do it on voice because it gives me that "Ozzy" sound. There are times when I will double a voice that is singing the same part for impact on something, but I don't use it as a part of my common practice like a lot of other engineers do. If I can't make a single lead vocal sound good on its own, I keep recording it until it does. Doubling it in my opinion, only doubles the lack of performance x2.

    So yeah, it's really subjective and something you'll need to decide per song or per style really. It will, in my opinion, always make a sound bigger than say a HAAS effect where you clone a played track and move the clip a few increments or use a delay with a HAAS setting. That has its place too...but I prefer two independently played tracks when I need them. :)

    -Danny
    post edited by Danny Danzi - 2012/10/10 06:25:28

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    timidi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 07:20:52 (permalink)
    Timidi - Would you care to explain what is wrong with the video? 



    Because of what Danny said. 

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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 09:12:27 (permalink)
    There's not much I can add to what was already said. 

    Good points all and I'll just say that this is a technique that I use quite often especially with acoustic guitar. 

    I don't often use it on anything else. By using it on the acoustic guitar, it gives a wider feel to the mix without making the mix seem watery and weak.  Especially in cans. 

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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 11:06:48 (permalink)
     "I don't do it on voice because it gives me that "Ozzy" sound. There are times when I will double a voice that is singing the same part for impact on something, but I don't use it as a part of my common practice like a lot of other engineers do. If I can't make a single lead vocal sound good on its own, I keep recording it until it does. Doubling it in my opinion, only doubles the lack of performance x2. "


    Are you talking about the lead vocal? What if you are trying to make a choir effect? 
    --------------------------------------


    Would this also work nicely on stringed instruments like violin, viola, cello and double bass?

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    Guitarhacker
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 11:33:06 (permalink)
    OK.. I use a different method on vocals.  I pan hard r/l on acoustic for a wide sound..... BUT... on a vocal it's different.

    Here's what I do. Not saying this is the right way.... it's how I do it. 

    I record the vocal track 2 different times. But I do not pan them...I keep them both centered. 

    I run pitch correction on the main and the second one.... In the mix, I choose the "better" vocal take as the main and set it where it needs to be in the mix as the main lead vocal. The second track gets set much, much lower. It's anywhere from -18db to -24db down in the mix below the main vocal.  It is very hard to hear as a different track and is only evident when the main vox is muted....then you can barely hear it. BUT... in the context of the mix, it tends to add a certain fatness with out the ozzy effect.  Set the levels by soloing the acoustic guitar and the 2 vocals... run the second one all the way down and slowly bring it up till you can hear it....then back it down slightly... you are close at this point... now, put them back int he total mix. Listen and see what it wounds like. 

    I have experimented also with 3 sub vocal tracks....one centered and the other 2 panned R/L with the main vocal well above the sub tracks..... but I have not used this recently, opting instead for the forst method with 2 tracks. 

    In my song Ode to Wolf I used this and in the choruses, I used the 2 sub vocals panned for the harmony.... but of course the harmony is not singing unison with the lead so that worked well in this case. I used envelopes to bring the harmonies up so they would be audible and evident in the chorus mix. 

    For a true choir effect, you should plan to record multiple tracks and use a number of different singers. No problem using 2 tracks per singer but don't use one singer to record 20 tracks and expect it to sound like a real choir. The subtle differences between the singer's voices is what makes a choir sound like a choir. 
    post edited by Guitarhacker - 2012/10/10 11:35:50

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    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 12:03:36 (permalink)
    sharpdion23


     Are you talking about the lead vocal? What if you are trying to make a choir effect? 
    --------------------------------------


    Would this also work nicely on stringed instruments like violin, viola, cello and double bass?
    Yeah, lead vocals. If I'm going for a choir effect, I try NOT to double the lead voice so it stands out a little more and doesn't sound like this choir comes in and the lead vocal has to take a back seat as the focal point because of all the others. When you go for a choir effect, you're most of the time going to print several harmonies. So even though it's the same voice, it's a different take and a different part. I find that when I double a lead vocal in a choir situation, that the lead vocal can stand out a bit too much. If you drop it back in the mix to make the choir shine as "an entity" you no longer have a focal point lead vocal in the mix....the whole choir sings the part. That's just my way of handling it though. Ther of course are times when you WANT lead voices to take a step back and let an entire choir take over. It depends on the situation.
     
    As for stringed instruments like you mentioned, sure you can do it. In a large orchestra ensemble with several "chairs" so to speak, there are usually several instruments per chair so you may be tripling a part depending on how many and much you want that section to stand out. If you thought of it that way and wanted to simulate that, you'd need to decide how many chairs per instrument. 1st, 2nd, 3rd chair trumpets....and how many in each....the same with violins....cello's etc. If you have sections of violins, you decide how many will be first chair that usually have the hardest parts to play. Say you have 3 first chair violins. That means you would track that part independently 3 times. Say you have 3 second chair violins playing a part under or a lower harmony. That's 3 more independent takes. 3 third chair violins playing under the 2nd chairs...there's 3 more independent tracks.
     
    If you want to simulate an orchestra, you have to simulate what an orchestra consists of. This is why they sound so big and full of life. They have several instruments playing the same parts as well as several playing different parts. In my school band, we had 8 people playing flute broken up into sections like I mentioned. First chair, second chair and so on. We had 6 alto sax players broken up into chairs and one tenor sax. We had 3 first chair trumpets, 3 second chair trumpets, 3 third chair trumpets. We had 12 violin players all broken up into chairs. We had 7 on clarinet and 2 on bassoon. To simulate something like this and make it authentic, you're not going to get it with 1 or 2 instruments playing these parts. You'd have to record them several times even if it were one person playing the parts.
     
    When you start to layer the parts, the stereo field will kick in due to how you have things panned as well as the human timing inconsistencies due to no one playing anything perfectly. You'll even get less of a stereo effect if one guy plays it all because part of the fun in stereo and layered tracks is how they are NOT perfect. Get two good cello players in the same room playing the same part. It will sound great, but there will always be human timing inconsistencies between them. This is what makes them sound good believe it or not. If they played the parts perfectly, it would sound mono.
     
    Here's a test for you to further demonstrate what I'm talking about with the mono thing if I've lost you. Import a stereo piece of music into Sonar. Then, clone that track so you have two of the same thing. Pan the first one all the way to the left, and pan the second one all the way to the right. Now press the stereo interleave button on each track so that both are mono. Press play. They sound mono and right down the middle, right? Ok...
     
    Hi-lite the second track, go to process, select slide and set it for "ticks" and enter 20 into the box and press enter. Now press play. You'll notice the track sounds like it's in stereo now even though you are in mono, right? That's called "The HAAS effect" but my reason for showing you that is so you can see what happens when you have some time drifting when you are presented with 2 of the same parts.
     
    When you first loaded this up, both parts playing the exact same thing were completely mono and down the middle. Once you off-set the timing on the second one, it became more stereo sounding because of the timing difference. You slid the other clip back 20 ticks. When we record musicians and double their parts, the timing not being perfect is what contributes to the stereo field. Add in different musicians with different timing and you form an orchestra. The tighter people play timing wise, the less you actually get the stereo effect. It's the loose-ness, execution start time/end times and little inconsistencies that make this so grand. Tighten it all up and all that goes away. Understand now? :)

    -Danny
    post edited by Danny Danzi - 2012/10/10 12:06:17

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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 12:56:56 (permalink)
    Thanks for the explanation.  On a side question, when/how do you use the sonitus chorus fx? or similar chorus effects?

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    batsbrew
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 13:02:12 (permalink)
    any time you decide to use 'an effect'......
    you are becoming 'the producer'.

    the choices you make, are what define you as a producer and engineer.


    maybe the correct question is only 'how'?

    the 'when' part, might never happen!

    and of course, i always suggest just diving in and experimenting....


    with all these questions you are asking, i think it's obvious you are just getting into the game...
    if so, then do what most of us have spent many years already, doing, and that's experiment.



    just because i tell you to do something one way, doesn't mean that it is THE way.....
    the fun part, is figuring out how to do stuff 'differently'.

    so that you can differentiate your sound, from everyone else's.



    the "HOW" to use these effects, is as elementary as simply cracking the manual open.




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    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 13:15:42 (permalink)
    sharpdion23


    Thanks for the explanation.  On a side question, when/how do you use the sonitus chorus fx? or similar chorus effects?

    Chorus can be used on anything really. It just sort of wavers the sound using a modulated delay with a controllable wave filter within it making things sound a bit thicker or sort of doubled in a sense. Really nice on acoustic guitars (you can sort of get a 12-string type effect in a sense but it still falls short), clean guitars, slightly on a stacked vocal bed, (or even lightly on a lead vocal for some texture and depth) a lead guitar solo (think Alex Lifeson from Rush) a string section, a piano etc. It can make things a little thicker but can also ruin a sound in 5 seconds....so be careful with it and use it sparringly.
     
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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 14:15:57 (permalink)
    Thanks Danny. What are vocal beds?

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    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 14:46:47 (permalink)
    Vocal beds meaning back up vocals where you may have a few layered sections of high, mid and low harmonies...or even one group of back-ups signging in unison. The chorus effect just adds a little depth and thickness. Try it and you'll see what I mean. :)

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    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 15:20:38 (permalink)
    (edit)
    post edited by sharpdion23 - 2012/10/10 19:21:50

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    Jeff Evans
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 16:33:33 (permalink)
    In my opinion the word 'bed' to describe vocals is a bad choice of words. Usually the word 'bed' means several instruments eg laying down 'bed' tracks in the rhythm section usually means bass, drums and perhaps one or two rhythm instruments.

    I think the word 'bed' or vocal bed the way Danny has used it could make it confusing. Vocals are either lead Vox or backing Vox or BV's. That is it! A vocal is either lead or backup harmonies etc. BV's is the much more common terms used here anyway.



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    #20
    Danny Danzi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 19:09:47 (permalink)
    Jeff Evans


    In my opinion the word 'bed' to describe vocals is a bad choice of words. Usually the word 'bed' means several instruments eg laying down 'bed' tracks in the rhythm section usually means bass, drums and perhaps one or two rhythm instruments.

    I think the word 'bed' or vocal bed the way Danny has used it could make it confusing. Vocals are either lead Vox or backing Vox or BV's. That is it! A vocal is either lead or backup harmonies etc. BV's is the much more common terms used here anyway.

    It's cool, I guess it depends what school you come from. :) "Beds" to me are anything with several instrument voicings creating a part as an entity whether they be all the same instrument or different ones. Bed meaning "several" or "group". If you use bass, drums and two rhythm instruments wouldn't that be "the rhythm section" or "rhythm bed"? Why wouldn't a vocal stack/choir or of back-up vocals be considered a bed? It's just a group of instruments really. I was never under the impression it had to be several DIFFERENT instruments. We just say beds when they equal "groups" of any kind. If it's the wrong term, my apologies...I'll have to inform all of PA, NJ, NY and DE to let them know. :) LOL!
     
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    #21
    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 19:22:08 (permalink)
    Though it isn't a good idea to use the chorus fx to make a choir effect. Am I right? It's only used to ad a little depth and thickness and not make one or two vocals into a choir. To make a choir effect, it's best to do multiple takes and either pan them or stack them with a bit of timing difference?

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    #22
    timidi
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 19:42:21 (permalink)
    sharpdion. I don't mean to be rude or anything but, all your questions are looking for answers.
    Most of the time there are none. Bottom line is, do what sounds good to you.
    And, I don't mean to say the responders are wrong.

    The trick is, putting in the time to know in your head, heart and ears what something will sound like.
    In other words, you hear something in your head, you know what to reach for to achieve it.

    As for your question about chorus, "use the chorus fx to make a choir effect". If you put a chorus on something, it will sound like you put a chorus on it or not, depending how you mix it in and the settings of the chorus that you use. It can be useful in any situation or not. Especially depending on what you are trying to achieve. 

    All that said, I think that whatever questions you have and whatever answers you get, I think it is most important to consider the style that you are going for. That to me is the deciding factor in most decisions if you want to put it into a "this does this and this does that" kind of thing. As the doubling a guitar thing goes, there are certain styles that this works great for and some not so much. And, it matters much as to what level/volume any effect is at. Is it supportive or just an all out effect?

    I don't know if I'm getting across what I'm trying to say and I should probably just delete this.
    But, oh well. That's all I got.


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    #23
    Jeff Evans
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 19:42:30 (permalink)
    Danny I think it just one of those American terms of reference compared to other countries. We use the word bed here but more in context of several different instruments. For vocal backups and stuff we generally don't use the word bed that is all I think. We tend to put vocals into either the lead group or the backing group.

    It is like you guys use the word board to describe a mixing console but here in Australia we call it a mixing console! (or sometimes the word desk) LOL 

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    #24
    sharpdion23
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    Re:Recording 2nd pass - when to use it? 2012/10/10 19:54:36 (permalink)
    sharpdion. I don't mean to be rude or anything but, all your questions are looking for answers. 
    Most of the time there are none. Bottom line is, do what sounds good to you.
    And, I don't mean to say the responders are wrong.

    The trick is, putting in the time to know in your head, heart and ears what something will sound like.
    In other words, you hear something in your head, you know what to reach for to achieve it.

    As for your question about chorus, "use the chorus fx to make a choir effect". If you put a chorus on something, it will sound like you put a chorus on it or not, depending how you mix it in and the settings of the chorus that you use. It can be useful in any situation or not. Especially depending on what you are trying to achieve. 

    All that said, I think that whatever questions you have and whatever answers you get, I think it is most important to consider the style that you are going for. That to me is the deciding factor in most decisions if you want to put it into a "this does this and this does that" kind of thing. As the doubling a guitar thing goes, there are certain styles that this works great for and some not so much. And, it matters much as to what level/volume any effect is at. Is it supportive or just an all out effect?

    I don't know if I'm getting across what I'm trying to say and I should probably just delete this.
    But, oh well. That's all I got.
    I get what you are trying to say. I'm just trying to get the general rule of thumb so I don't head in the wrong direction and try to use it in ways that will actually benefit the project and not just use it for every scenario.


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    #25
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