saw this in an article on beatport and copied out what i thought was really good info. dusky was talking about his top 5 tips for production. the last one was especially interesting to me:
Parallel processing
Utilizing effects and dynamic processing by way of sends to bus
channels is the way forward. Once you understand the concept and learn
to balance the levels appropriately, it will add depth and subtlety to
your mixes that can't be achieved with a channel insert. The only way to
get good at this is to practice, but here are a couple of key parallel
processing techniques we use to get you started.
Reverbs: This works for any instrument, including bass (not putting
reverb on bass is a myth). Send the signal to a bus with a reverb insert
set fully wet, match the pre-delay time to your tempo, use parametric
EQ on the reverb to get rid of any unnecessary frequencies (normally
1000 Hz – 4000 Hz and a low cut), side-chain it with compression if you
want it to "pump," then set the level.
Compression: Works especially well on drums if you want to add subtle
"punch." As before, send your drum signals to a bus, add compression
with a high ratio, fast knee, very slow attack, and very short release.
Then bring down the threshold until you start lose a bit of volume. Add
an EQ with a bit of low cut, boost around 100 Hz, and a high frequency
shelf with a low Q setting around 12000 Hz. Set the level to add the
necessary required punch
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