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7

That effect is called Backwards Reverb - the simplest way to do it is to reverse the waveform, then add a normal reverb, then reverse it again. Many DAW's have a backwards reverb plugin which effectively does exactly this, but without you having to do the reversing manually, but I don't think Fruity Loops has this. I did find this tutorial specific to ...


4

You should have a good listen to the stage when it's quiet and see if there are any strange echos or booms etc I would guess that bass trapping would help fix your problem, seeing as you say the sound is muddy and unclear. From the little I know about it muddiness tends to come from excessive bass reverb in the room ( often masked by mid/top reverb ) .... ...


4

Refer to attached png Mount PA speakers on outside of hole, on sides as per black rectangles in picture. Place guitar and bass amps/speakers (in red) in rear of hole, also center trap set (drum kit in blue). Do not use floor monitors, instead have every amp mic'ed including PA, and mix with output into "In-Ear" system. Everyone wears an ear piece. UPDATE: ...


3

There are several solutions for your problem, and they have huge price range and complexity differences. I'll cover the conceptual basics here and the issues you may come across. I am assuming that your question was literal; you are attempting to that a mic signal from a singer and send it back to her with some effects on her voice without recording her ...


2

The ripple is an effect of the time stretching algorithm. There are several different algorithms that are good at different kinds of sound. One for a drum loop would be very bad for an audio book. You will just have to experiment with different software and different algorithms and different settings. The one I used the most is Ableton Live, which have ...


2

You can't. The best you can do is try and find time compression/expansion software that has better algorithms/math behind them than other programs. The only alternative I can think of is to chop the audio into segments and time expand each one with different values based on how sensitive each one is to the effect.Then cross fade them.This will sound ...



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