Hi-
I agree with Mark, having encountered this effect a
few times while playing with tapes. Flanging can be
fascinating if controlled & used right. Getting rid
of it can be as easy as inserting a driver of some
sort (line driver?) that has a phase inversion switch.
Such a switch may even be built into one of your
boxes or software effects. Try this on subsequent
'tron overdubs. As with the reverb condition
suggested by Mark K., try inversion in the reverb send
coupling (if possible). Good luck!
-Bruce Daily
M400 #1221
--- mark kasian <
easle12@...> wrote:
> It's comb filtering caused by out of phase identical
> tracks...probably because of a summed reverb
> channel.
> Try separating them with panning and don't bus the
> multiple channels to the same reverb program.
> --- Ignacio <ignacionietocarvajal@...> wrote:
>
> > Hi:
> >
> > I have been recording a song with 6 mellotron
> violin
> > tracks (three
> > pairs of mellotron-violins so I can sustain a note
> > on some parts). The
> > final result is that I get a very audible flanger
> > effect on some parts
> > that weren't intended to be there. I am using very
> > little effect, just
> > some very LIGHT reverb from a "Holy grail" reverb
> > pedal I use with
> > guitars, organs, flute etc with very nice results.
>
> >
> > Im using a Yamaha AW16G for recording the tracks.
> > You can hear it in
> > www.myspace.com/ignacioNieto (it's called "la
> muerte
> > de la
> > inocencia"). Any idea of how can I get rid of that
> > flanger effect?
> >
> > Thanks.
> >
> > Nacho.
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
>
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