--- In logic-users@yahoogroups.com, Sascha Franck <S.Franck@...> wrote:
>
> pfloyd714714 wrote:
>>I would like to hear a reverb while I record, without necessarily
>>committing the effect to the
>>recorded track.
>
>In case your latency is reasonably small on the Edirol, you could just
>use a software reverb, even in case you were monitoring through
>external hardware. Just set up a reverb send on an input object (or a
pre-fader
> reverb send on the object you're recording on, then pull the volume of
> the channel down).
You can also use a stereo (or mono) Aux object with the inputs set to
1-2 (or 1-mono) and use direct monitoring on the Edirol, this works
with any audio interface that has direct (hardware) monitoring.
Test: Set up a Goldverb on an Aux object with the Aux inputs set to
1-2. Set the Goldverb mix at 100% and pre-delay to 0. Reverb time to
2sec, diffusion to 100%. The volume slider of the aux will control the
amount of reverb in the input mix. Playback will be dry, no further
adjustments are needed except to mix the direct monitor and reverb
levels to taste. If reverb is no longer needed on the input mute the
Aux object. Pre-delay is set to 0 as the audio interface latency
already acts as pre-delay. Adjust GoldVerb to preferred settings.
howard