The Effect Algorithms - Behringer VIRTUALIZER DSP1000 User Manual

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5. THE EFFECT ALGORITHMS

EFFECT ALGORITHM
01 Cathedral
02 Plate
03 Small Hall
04 Room
05 Studio
06 Concert
07 Stage
08 Vocal
09 Percussion
10 Delay
11 Echo
12 Gated Reverb
13 Reverse Reverb
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DESCRIPTION
Reverb program generating long and
dense reverberation, much like the
natural reverb ambience found in
churches or cathedrals.
Simulation of a reverb plate. A
warm, dense reverb.
Simulation of a small hall with
plenty of different reverb portions.
Reverb program generating a small
room.
Simulates the reverb ambience
found in a recording room. Natural
and unobtrusive.
Simulates concert hall reverb.
Reverb program with live
atmosphere and presence in the
treble range.
Homogeneous reverb with variable
decay time and neutral sound
character.
Dense reverb with lots of reflections.
Repetition of the original signal.
Similar to the delay effect, Echo is
limited in its frequency spectrum.
Reverb program whose reverb tail is
cut off automatically by a gate after
an adjustable amount of time, i.e.
the reverb does not decay. As a
special feature you can control the
threshold level for the gate.
Reverb program with an inverted
amplitude envelope, i.e. the effect
starts softly to subsequently
increase in volume (unlike natural
reverb).
APPLICATION
Particularly suitable for solo
instruments and voices needing lots
of reverb.
A classic reverb program for drums
(snare) and vocals.
Especially for drums and
instruments that need to be
processed with short and dense
reverberation.
All-rounder, also for mixdowns.
For various applications, however,
this program has more "room" than
effect #4.
More "agile" than the Studio
program, increased presence in the
treble range.
Designed for live applications and for
enhancing mix-downs.
Ideally suited to integrate solo and
choral voices into the overall mix.
To be used especially for dynamic
signals such as drums and
percussion.
If used moderately, delay can give
vocals and instruments more depth
and width. Increase effect volume in
the mix to produce the typical echo
effect.
Use the Echo effect to simulate the
sound of older tape delays. The
treble presence of the echos
diminishes with each repetition.
Highly popular among drummers. A
snare drum processed with a gated
reverb has a very punchy sound.
Reverse reverb programs are often
used for special-purpose
applications, for example, to
simulate the effect of a tape played
back in reverse direction.

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