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An unrealistically short tom used only to color the existing drumline, as a second layer, or as a delay effect feed.
I use it at low volume in some works (as a cymbal indication) in which I separate entirely the cymbals (crashes, hi-hats, rings etc) from the other drums, in order I add more highs (high frequencies) to the snare and the guitar AND THEN, SECONDARILY I mix the cymbal-line audiofile with the general mixdown.
The attack which starts at the beginning until 25 msec is kept the same as on tom mystic M stereo.wav but after it I applied (absolute) low pass at 2 kHz, and hard compression in order to avoid digital distortion from amplitudal excedance. I kept only 200 ms from the start, and I draw by hand the (V keyboard button) level envelope (process) on WaveLabe. I draw a fade out in down-leaning steps, because it is more believable psychoacoustically than any other fading envelope (in gives time to understand each step).
Type
Wave (.wav)
Duration
0:00.198
File size
38.2 KB
Sample rate
44100.0 Hz
Bit depth
16 bit
Channels
Stereo
2 years, 1 month ago
Nice
3 years, 9 months ago
No. It's not that good. I don't like it. But it works (without this file) to separate the cymbals from the other drums to apply different eqs.
On the cymballess drum mix add more mid-bass and mid-highs and lower enough the mids (don't kill them entirely). Widen the mid-high range but not the mid-bass.
On the only-cymbals-hihats-and-rings file cut create two subfiles:
1. the ring-hihat and 2. the crash file. (the drummer should periodically use the pure classic crash sound and not all the time otherwise it doesn't work) Keep the crashes as they are but trim the high-highs. Then mix 1. and 2. and you have your only-cymbals-hihats-and-rings file.
Now use them in the overall mixdown.
notice:
The frequency spectrum is separated in (cardinal frequency range compartmentalization or just cardinal) lo (low), middle (mid), hi (high), but if you are a sound engineer the same applies for these categories, thus for example the lows (low frequencies) are separated in low-low, low-mid and low-high, etc.
It is called the intercardinal frequency range (also called the intermediate compartmentalization of frequencies and, historically, ordinal).
3 years, 9 months ago
Me think: wonderful this!