Harman MPMI Benutzerhandbuch

Seite von 60
36
Soundcraft MFXi MPMi User Guide Issue 1210
Reverse Reverb
Reverse reverb works in the opposite fashion from normal reverb. Whereas a normal reverb has the loudest 
series of reflections heard first that then become quieter over time, the Reverse reverb has the softest reflec-
tions (essentially the tail of the reverb) heard first, and then grows louder over time until they abruptly cut off. 
Ambience Reverb
Ambience is used to simulate the effect of a small or medium sized room without noticeable decay. It is often 
used for voice, guitar or percussion. 
Studio Reverb
Much like Room reverb, Studio produces an excellent simulation of smaller, well controlled acoustic spaces, 
characteristic of the main performance areas in recording studios. Studio is also useful with dialog and 
voiceover applications as well as individual instrument and electric guitar tracks.
Arena Reverb
Arena reverb emulates a huge physical space such as an indoor sports venue or stadium. The characteristics 
of Arena reverb are long secondary reflection times and a reduced amount of high frequency content. Arena 
is a mostly mid- and low frequency dominant reverb, and is an ideal selection for “special effect” type ap-
plications that require extremely long reverb times. It is not a good choice for a very busy mix, since it can 
reduce intelligibility. 
Spring Reverb
A Spring reverb is created by a pair of piezoelectric crystals—one acting as a speaker and the other acting as 
a microphone— connected by a simple set of springs. The characteristic ‘boing’ of a spring is an important 
component of many classic rock and rockabilly guitar sounds. 
KARAOKE
The Golden Karaoke Patch creates a great Karaoke performance sound in any size KTV room.
REVERB CONTROLS
Pre Delay 
Creates an additional time delay between the source signal and the onset of reverberation. This control is not 
intended to precisely mimic the time delays in natural spaces, as the build-up of reverberation is gradual, 
and the initial time gap is usually relatively short. For the most natural effect, the Pre Delay values should be 
set in the range of 10-25 milliseconds. However, if a mix is very busy or overly cluttered, increasing the Pre 
Delay time may help clarify it, and set each instrument apart from each other.
Decay 
Controls the amount of time the reverb can be heard. Higher settings increase reverberation times which are 
usually associated with larger acoustical environments, but can decrease intelligibility. Lower settings shorten 
reverb times and should be used when a smaller apparent space or a more subtle effect is desired. 
Liveliness 
Adjusts the amount of high frequency content in the reverberation tails. Higher settings increase high frequency 
response, creating brighter reverbs; lower settings create darker reverbs with more bass frequency emphasis.