by sampleandhold » Mon Mar 15, 2004 3:33 am
now, hold on. the parametric eq is bad, i mean at it's finest tuning it notches filters out at a sledgehammer's accuracy (at 1 band width you are hearing roll off over an octave). but there is something else in the e 5000 ultras inventory that is just as good. now, i can't tell what it is actualy called because i can't tell the difference between lower case l's and capital I's on the emu, but i believe it is called a FIR, or FLR. this is a non-musical type of filter, kind of like an lpf or hpf. you can actualy do notches, band passes, if i remember right, and of course lpf and hpf as well.
you have a graphical representation of the filter at work, and you have a q control as well. depending on what you are filtering, you have either one frequency options (for hp and lp) or two frequency options (notch and band pass) and a thing called "point". the point value goes from 1 to 99, at the highest setting you get the sharpest resolution level of filtering and at 1 of course you get low resolution in your filtering. there is also if i remember correctly, you have a gain reduction or boost option as well.
i used this filter the other day on some cymbals that sampled to fill out my break. i used a hpf form of this fir or flr and completely wiped out my lowend off the cymbals. it gave them that tight, tinnie shacker sound that you get in alot of dnb tracks. of course i think i set my frequency at either 500 or 1 k.
of course i would say try this out, and if it isn't to your liking you can aways resample using one of the zplanes or standard filters on the emu as well. i do this all the time so i can get my break layers sitting just right.
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