Logic Pro 8 Workshop - Using Reverb
Logic’s reverb plug-ins are essential tools for three-dimensional mixing and can generate a number of interesting spatial effects. Mark Cousins finds his space.

For a mix to be truly three-dimensional you invariably need to apply a little reverb, exploiting its unique ability to re-create an acoustic space and bring depth and dimension to the soundstage. It’s no surprise, therefore, to find that engineers have long used artificial reverb in some shape or another (whether in the form of a plate reverb, spring reverb or the modern-day wonders of convolution reverb), even in situations when the recording has already been captured in a ‘lively’ acoustic. If you’re a user of Logic, you’ll already have access to a good range of reverb plug-ins, but how do these knit together to create a professional-sounding ambience in your mixes?
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 76
Filed under
General Features,
Software Workshops,
Features,
Logic Tutorials
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