> I think there are a lot of plugs which do not have this. For example, the > distortion plug ins, and the compressor plugs. Exactly; these are plugins that do not simply add an effect to your sound, but modify it completely. Hence a "dry/wet" balance has no meaning. Unless you want to sum it with the original sound as Gary suggested. Which is possible, but it's logical that the effect doesn't provide this setting since it has nothing to do with the effect itself really. > If you could do wet/dry with a > compressor you could get both dynamic hits and smooth solid sound. As I said there's no wet and dry with a compressor, but if you mean adding the original sound and the compressed sound, I think you just made up a very complicated way of changing the gain/threshold combination. > > Well EQ is an example where "wet/dry" is not really appliccable > > maybe not normally applicable in a standard setting, What I mean is that there is no such thing as wet and dry there. So there's actually no way to implement that. With a reverb, some sound is added to the original. There you can put a switch on the balance between the original and the added sound. But compressors and EQs modify the sound itself, so there is no "dry" sound (and no "water") that can be defined in the result. > but it would have its > uses. suppose you wanted to gradually make a track brighter by adding in some > high harmonics. Well then just increase those harmonics. Or use an exiter, which _adds_ sound like a reverb (I think it lacks a wet/dry mix, but the level is just one knob anyway). :o) > actually it might be very useful to have a separate buss with a > eq and bitcrusher that could be automated. No trouble there! :o) Maurits.
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Re: [Logic_Cafe] Automation wet/dry mix & a cup of tea please
2005-07-19 by Maurits van de Kamp
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