paulman wrote: βThu Jul 01, 2021 7:53 pm
@Tadpui, you are my favorite person right now. The info you gave me will change my life for the better. I've already done another mix by bouncing the drums to audio, but from now on I can do it right. Thank you!!! And yes, I use Reaper. I don't know what the other thing you mentioned is.
I did use compression to beef up the drums, and used volume automation to bring them up as the song gets bigger and louder.
Awesome, that's great to hear! I had that same "a-ha!" moment with EZDrummer, I remember how exciting it was
The new mix sounds much improved, the drums are much more present overall. I might agree with Steve, maybe shop through the SD3 sample library for other snares that you have and see if anything else fits better. This one doesn't bug me necessarily, but I'd be curious to hear something tuned lower to hear how it fits. Overall, the mix even sounds better. Good balance, good tones on everything.
For some reason, I thought you were using PreSonus Studio One. I usually remember people's gear as well as their names or faces
Reaper makes it nice and easy to set the multitrack routing up. At some point, I discovered track templates in Reaper too. If you select a bunch of tracks (Ctrl+click or Shift+click), then right-click on one of them, choose "Save tracks as track template" and give them a name. Then in your next project, you can right-click the track area and select "Insert track from template", choose the saved template and BOOM you've got your SD3 and all of its multitracks ready to go without having to set it all up again. It's a huge time-saver. Although I still find myself setting all of the tracks up from scratch a lot...mainly because I forget that templates are a thing
