The Super Separator Trick

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  • Опубликовано: 28 мар 2022
  • In which I use comb filtering tricks to create better separation between two parts that are occupying similar frequency ranges.
    And here's the follow-up video:
    • Super Separator and Be...
    I mentioned a video that covers Haas delay: its part 2 in this playlist:
    How To Mix In Stereo Without Sucking In Mono: • How To Mix In Stereo W...
    And the Roll Your Own Crossover video:
    • Reaper Tip: Make a 3 B...
    If you like this type of content and you want to see it more often, consider signing up for Channel Membership: / @danworrall
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    Video edited with VEGAS Pro 17:
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Комментарии • 670

  • @macboogieland2897
    @macboogieland2897 2 года назад +314

    i guess we can all agree that dan is a damn near infinite source of engineering knowledge, but why tf is the music in all videos this annoyingly bad?

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +519

      Pinning your comment because I would also like to know the answer...

    • @notkiji
      @notkiji 2 года назад +58

      well, if it serves as an example for what he is trying to demonstrate in the video, it works. and honestly i dont think its that bad, i've heard much worse music than his lol

    • @entity9588
      @entity9588 2 года назад +138

      I actually like most of the music Dan uses. I would like to know why your opinion sucks so hard...

    • @Shameless-Plugs-TM
      @Shameless-Plugs-TM 2 года назад +87

      I think Dan's music is fantastic...

    • @matthijshebly
      @matthijshebly 2 года назад +21

      @@Shameless-Plugs-TM I completely agree

  • @TheRXStudios
    @TheRXStudios Год назад +25

    I used this on some double tracked heavy metal guitars panned hard left and right. It made the guitars sound much wider due to more difference information, but unlike using a side high shelf or using a spreader plugin, when combined in mono, it sums into the flat frequency response again!

  • @Daniel-D-Teach
    @Daniel-D-Teach 2 года назад +34

    As an educator, I adore how pedagogy-oriented your videos are. You have a supreme talent of deploying humor without ever contaminating the message, and every video of yours is an absolute joy to watch (usually more than once, to grasp more and more of the concepts). Thank you for everything you do!

  • @ChristopherMeadors
    @ChristopherMeadors 2 года назад +56

    A similar trick that achieves something different, which I don't believe you mentioned in the mixing in stereo series. If you have a mono signal that you want to add some width to. Use a M/S decoder. Send the original mono to the M and then a high-passed, few ms delayed copy of that to the S, and let them be reintegrated. This creates a comb filter effect too, but with the inverse of the combs on the left and right. If the width of this new signal is decreased to nothing it becomes the original mono again. Less than a full collapse makes the combs less deep.

    • @Bthelick
      @Bthelick 2 года назад +3

      I like to add a haas copy to one side which is just 180'd on the other side. filter optional. great width and depth perceived out of a mono source but 100% mono compatible.

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +14

      Adding equal and opposite amounts of something to left and right is literally exactly what happens when you add something to the side channel. So you're actually achieving the same result as Christopher above.

    • @Bthelick
      @Bthelick 2 года назад +1

      @@DanWorrall exactly. I was meaning to phrase it in a much simpler way.

  • @Googahgee
    @Googahgee 2 года назад +11

    Can’t believe you drop a video addressing an issue I’ve been having in a mix the day after I run into it. Cheers!

  • @squadtvofficial
    @squadtvofficial 2 года назад +38

    I am leaping into the comments in outrage.

    • @peexstile
      @peexstile 2 года назад +2

      I'm supporting your rage with random facts.

    • @false-set
      @false-set Год назад +2

      I too would like to express outrage!
      But because I want to fit in.

  • @aryabanerjee1179
    @aryabanerjee1179 Год назад +2

    We are so blessed to have someone like you, please never stop making videos, your honesty and humbleness is applauded

  • @Noammats
    @Noammats Год назад +11

    I used to use Cubase and accepted the fact that quite a few plugins won't load up properly, crash, or stop working at some point. Moving to Ableton only worsens the situation, as only a few actually loaded up. The first time I started Reaper I saw ALL the plugins I ever installed loaded perfectly waiting for me to use them. It was like seeing all my lost friends, I was almost in tears.

    • @voinrima
      @voinrima 2 месяца назад

      It seems I don't have much plugins yet...Pulsar Audio Echo plugin did crash it a few times, but nothing else did. I am a Voxengo and Fabfilter guy, maybe this is why

    • @Noammats
      @Noammats 2 месяца назад

      @@voinrima Perhaps. Also there is a different with project sizes and CPU loads especially on different systems and different sample rates.

  • @eyeball226
    @eyeball226 2 года назад +13

    I'd never thought of doing it, but as soon as I saw the thumbnail I knew what the trick would be. I've been a Reaper user for about 10 years now so I'm blissfully unaware of the limitations the users of other DAWs have to live with.

    • @axelfoley1768
      @axelfoley1768 2 года назад +3

      Other DAWs are not really limited. If you need 10 gazillion ways to route your tracks then you have other issues. Good music does not need ten billion ways to route audio.

    • @unoaotroa
      @unoaotroa 2 года назад

      @@axelfoley1768 Except a DAW is not only for mixing music; as its acronym suggests, it is an audio workstation. And as such, REAPER excels in its flexibility for audio engineering. This strength can play in favor of developing complex production strategies. For example, you could replicate a very similar system as the one Brian Eno used to create ‘Music for Airports’; which, in essence, was comprised of multiple mixers and delay units being fed into each other, with very little outside input to the system. With REAPER, the possibility of replicating a generative system like the previously described (and others) is digitally embedded in its construction!!

    • @heanz
      @heanz 2 года назад

      axel Foley, great username by the way, he is right. There is a difference btw audiophiles and hitmakers.

    • @axelfoley1768
      @axelfoley1768 2 года назад

      @@heanz yeah, audiophiles are listeners, hitmakers get on with the job. I've made tracks with no way to route audio. The current DAWs are miraculous for me, more than I'd ever need. If I needed those extra bits in Reaper then I wouldn't be using a different DAW, simple as that.

    • @eyeball226
      @eyeball226 2 года назад

      @@heanz Audiophiles are corksniffers, Dan's just a great engineer.
      What I'm saying is - audiophiles care about £1000 cables because they think it makes their listening experience better, good engineers care about being able to route audio in creative ways that make their mixes better.

  • @lopp3
    @lopp3 2 года назад

    I had a mix where an overlap in two really aggressive synth sounds was blunting the edge on both of them and it was driving me insane. This trick was exactly what the situation needed, letting each one poke through the other. Thanks for saving the mix, Dan!

  • @TylersTrying
    @TylersTrying 2 года назад +6

    Amazing trick. Very exciting to hear that when the COMB bus is muted the whole mix sounds similar to some of the stuff I'm making now. Apparently I have a masking problem. I'm excited to try this out!

  • @rollingrock5143
    @rollingrock5143 2 года назад +1

    As a mix engineer for music and film, your videos make my brain melt. Love your stuff so much Dan.

  • @danivalles7638
    @danivalles7638 2 года назад

    Amazing technique Dan, AMAZING. Thank you so much to sare it with us.

  • @michaelsnell4187
    @michaelsnell4187 2 года назад +8

    For anyone wanting a logic x work around. For the channel of which you want to polarity flip the send, send it to aux. Then set the output of this aux to no output, and plug in the logic stock “gain” plugin. Flip the polarity in the gain plug-in then send this channel to the comb filtering aux

    • @mobilejahkuzzi
      @mobilejahkuzzi Год назад

      Isn’t it easier to NOT set to 'no output', and instead set the output to the channel with comb filtering? Or am I missing something?

  • @angelocherymusic
    @angelocherymusic 2 года назад

    Fantastic work can’t wait to try this!

  • @DJMartynB
    @DJMartynB 2 года назад

    Just tried it.. adds so much depth it’s magical. Thank you for the knowledge bomb 🔥🤓👌

  • @plactoriox9952
    @plactoriox9952 2 года назад +31

    I have been using Ableton for four years now and it suits my electronic music production needs perfectly. However, I have become more and more interested in Multitrack Mixing and there seems to be a huge obstacle in my way to get to a comfortable and quick workflow that makes sense. Started to use Reaper for all my mixing purposes and I am very happy. Cannot recommend it enough.

    • @paukin9344
      @paukin9344 2 года назад +6

      I can't recommend mixing outside of Ableton enough. It frees me from the mixing as you go curse so i don't feel the need to make everything fit perfectly before ive even thought about the mixdown

    • @amphitheatre
      @amphitheatre 2 года назад

      i did the same for awhile, now ive switched to reaper full time and only use abletonfor its unique warp functions only

    • @Bthelick
      @Bthelick 2 года назад +2

      I use live for electronic composition ,production , sound design and mix mastering. You really can't beat the workflow for speed and that counts for a hell of a lot now. If I had more time I would go back to reaper as it is indeed more flexible but music is my living and music has deadlines and algorithms to please haha. When you get 80 million views on a track that took you 6 hours you kinda realise spending an extra week getting the mix perfect isn't actually a factor in A) paying the bills and B) other people's ears. its not enough of a difference to truly matter in the real world (unless your brand's audience just happens to be exclusively made up of engineers)

    • @MantasticHams
      @MantasticHams 2 года назад +1

      @@amphitheatre Do you mean the quantization and time stretching of beats? You can get some very similar functionality in reaper with the MK Slicer Extension, or even without that if you like doing it by hand, using stretch markers. You can get MK Slicer through Reapack, its really amazing! grabs all the transients based on a threshhold knob and then applies either a stretch marker or a split at them, then you can quantize them, or even randomize the order of the slices. Absolutely indispensable tool if you work with a lot of loops.

    • @amphitheatre
      @amphitheatre 2 года назад +1

      @@MantasticHams thank you so much for letting me know, this thing IS a big help, and yes i work with loops, the fact that it has a random slicer feature is brilliant, i love anything with a random button. however, thats not what i meant with my comment. ableton has stretch algorithms like "repitch" and "complex" that sound like nothing else, nothing to do with how it slices. MK Slicer seems very helpful for my experimental workflow, so again, thanks for commenting!

  • @JadoubeX
    @JadoubeX 2 года назад +2

    Good trick! Me Likely. Also, Reaper routing is the main reason I have been using it to mix for years. I agree with you there 110%

  • @Bthelick
    @Bthelick 2 года назад +27

    Dan, I think you might be one of the only people to help decipher audio engineering's greatest mystery. it has eluded many since the 90s and the original engineer Alan Moulder is a hermit that doesn't give interviews.
    On Nine Inch Nails's 2nd Album the Downward Spiral, the track "Ruiner" contains a truly outside the speakers 3d (non-binaural) vocal at 1:08 ish that I have not witnessed in any other recording before or since and no-one seems to know how it was done. especially in '94. I would love to open a discussion with you. Or maybe it might encourage a video.

    • @dndamian
      @dndamian 2 года назад +1

      I went straight looking for this. Fckng hell! Alan Moulder!!! That voice at 1:08 feels like it has more low end than anything in the song

    • @Bthelick
      @Bthelick 2 года назад +1

      @@dndamian haha yeah. it almost feels like they phased it as a function of frequency. because the upper frequencies appear to be nearer mono.
      On a good set up though it sounds like he's nearly behind my left ear its incredible.

    • @xinkay
      @xinkay 2 года назад +2

      wtf???

    • @macronencer
      @macronencer 2 года назад

      Wow, that really is impressive. I just listened to that track on RUclips... on 2013 Macbook Air laptop speakers so there wasn't a lot of bass response and the sound was merely "adequate". And it was STILL noticeable and startling. Yeah, I'd like to know how that was done as well...

    • @MarsViolet
      @MarsViolet 2 года назад

      Just listened to it. That moment actually threw me out of the song. I went from staring into the abyss, contemplating suicide, to picturing Trent Reznor standing behind a microphone in a recording studio.
      Anyway, are you sure that they didn't just crank the pan knob hard left?

  • @Pinkybum
    @Pinkybum 2 года назад

    I had thought about doing this on sources which have the same frequency range but never worked out how it could be implemented. Makes sense to do a inverted offset. Now I have another way to make the guitars sound huger!

  • @Matheus-ly6eu
    @Matheus-ly6eu 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for exposing to us your reason, alongside the logic that leads you to this affirmation. I hope your fan-base is able to live with that. I, for one... Let's just say that it's gonna take me a bit to properly digest the facts.

  • @ekramwasi238
    @ekramwasi238 2 года назад +1

    I've been blessed enough to start my audio recording journey with Cockos Reaper in 2010 and it has been a fantastic one till this day.
    I want to thank you Dan, for being such a generous person and sharing so much of your knowledge which have helped me become a far better mixer than I was even a couple of months ago.

  • @MrEmptyhead
    @MrEmptyhead 2 года назад +2

    I wish I knew half the stuff that Dan knows, but annoyingly, then it would still mean he knows twice as much, so I would still have to come back and heckle him some more. Awesome content !!!

  • @Stormsurf001
    @Stormsurf001 2 года назад

    I get it now! - Thanks for adding the follow-on video. That clarified alot of confusion for me.

  • @AironExTv
    @AironExTv 2 года назад

    Sweet tricks. Already concocting a Volcano based method for spooky dialogue effects I‘m going to make use of in tomorrows mix.

  • @searchiemusic
    @searchiemusic Год назад

    i just happened to buy a hardware box that does something similar, couldn't stop thinking about this, pretty excited to compare the two

  • @cjcurcio
    @cjcurcio Год назад

    Thanks again, Dan!

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 2 года назад +1

    Interesting stuff Dan.

  • @lucianaeris9564
    @lucianaeris9564 2 года назад

    Thanks for the trick!

  • @AKAtAGG
    @AKAtAGG 2 года назад

    Such a great tip. I've never tried this method and that seems to insane to me now that I know about it.

  • @TommyMarcinek
    @TommyMarcinek Год назад +2

    Dan, you are a genius!! I can't tell you how much I've learned from you! Much success to you! Oh, and btw, Reaper rocks!!! However, leaning Reaper is a never-ending learning experience.....nobody can ever "master" that DAW, it's too complicated and customizable, but THAT makes it fun. IMHO

  • @mcadder
    @mcadder 2 года назад +62

    The nr 1 reason for me is that when I want to start Reaper it's up and running in 1 sec - it boosts creativity. Cubase, for example, takes 30 secs... and when I use, say, 10 instances of TH-U (a guitar amp emulator) it uses 3% CPU in reaper, in Cubase it is already creating pops and clicks... Reaper is a very well programmed music software.

    • @rautshsale1948
      @rautshsale1948 2 года назад +5

      Sure I also get so inspired when my DAW opens fast

    • @kadenfurr9699
      @kadenfurr9699 2 года назад +19

      @@rautshsale1948 I do enjoy having an idea and not having to wait 5 years to get it out of my head
      Contrary to what your sarcasm implies startup time is important

    • @robotronixgaming2933
      @robotronixgaming2933 2 года назад

      luckily with my computer its fast enough to open cubase in like 5 seconds so its not much of a problem for me

    • @YuriKovalyov
      @YuriKovalyov 2 года назад +11

      @@robotronixgaming2933 think about the majority of us who lacks NASA computers.

    • @tomik6537
      @tomik6537 2 года назад +1

      on a Mac i havent heard a click or a pop in 8 years.
      but I miss cubase a lot

  • @albiss1164
    @albiss1164 Год назад

    Wow! Thanks for sharing Professor Worrall :)

  • @JFrameMan
    @JFrameMan 2 года назад +54

    what makes reaper special for me are scripts, themes, and actions. There is so much untapped potential that even if the developers stopped updating the program, we could create features for decades. I've pretty much automated all articulations, track icons/colors by name, and modded a theme to show only the buttons I use and it wasn't as difficult as I thought. Well worth the money.

    • @edunogues23
      @edunogues23 2 года назад +1

      Yes man! The customization is amazing, for me the only thing it sucks about it is the fact that there isnt retrospective record without clumsy scripts, id love to have a quickpunch style in reaper

  • @ComposerMichaelDow
    @ComposerMichaelDow 2 года назад +115

    It's actually a little difficult to hear what effect is happening here due to the synth sounds, and of course talking over the top. The lesson is as always a great one, explained in the best possible way, but i think the source sounds, and some clearer A/Bing to help everyone hear. As the synths are ducking in and out all the time from your voice, and they're already dancing around beautifully, it's hard to really know what's happened. Maybe using two guitars would have worked better, or a big static synth pad with a guitar, or something not already moving and changing every split second. :) You didn't ask me, but just thought i'd leave some feedback, it's the only time i feel i've wanted to with your videos that's for sure.

    • @Pinkybum
      @Pinkybum 2 года назад

      The effect was applied to the synths with similar sounds panned to the middle. At least I thought I was hearing that!

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee 2 года назад

      Try from 6:37 to hear the effect clearly.

    • @cornoc
      @cornoc 2 года назад +1

      the point about talking over the music is valid, but if he made the A/B clearer, it would ironically obscure what he was trying to show, which is how much the sound stands out with the comb filtering trick when you're listening to the FULL mix.

    • @Intheearhole
      @Intheearhole 2 года назад +8

      Yeah. A couple of whacky-pulsey synth sounds are not the best example sources.

    • @RutgerS.
      @RutgerS. 2 года назад +5

      Totally agree. Very difficult to actually hear what is happening.

  • @iqnill
    @iqnill 2 года назад

    You, Sir are a breath of fresh air.

  • @dannyjesse3655
    @dannyjesse3655 2 года назад +24

    My favorite feature of reaper is the flexibility of the routing. I tend to have sends running all over the mix and its caused me to create new and interesting sounds that would be almost impossible to do organically in pro-tools.

    • @Wergiftfresch
      @Wergiftfresch 2 года назад +4

      I wish reaper copied ardour‘s take on sends where a send is essentially an FX you can put *anywhere* in an FX chain. Pre or post FX is not enough at times.

    • @dvlce_music
      @dvlce_music 2 года назад

      Can I ask what limits you from doing it in pro tools? My projects tend to have tens of sends going around, normally 3+ per track and I haven't really had issues with it.

    • @simongunkel7457
      @simongunkel7457 2 года назад +1

      @@Wergiftfresch The way to implement the Ardour take in Reaper is to add as many channels to the track as you want to send, then in the settings for the last effect prior to the send, you also connect the output to the additional chennels. Finally you add a post-FX send from these additional channels to whereever you want to send it.

    • @Wergiftfresch
      @Wergiftfresch 2 года назад +1

      @@simongunkel7457 OK, assume I have three FX and I want to route post-1, post-2, post-3 out. Now I have 8 audio channels on the track. I set parent-send to 2 (1-2). I post-FX send 3-4 (= post-1), 5-6 (=post-2), 7-8 (=post-3). Note that I have to take care to add 4 channels to FX2 (or I'll overwrite 3-4 with post-2), and 6 channels to FX3 (same, but with 5-6). I cannot copy this FX chain elsewhere where I have multiple channels. It's finnicky, involved, verbose, manual and fragile. Compare that to CTRL-dragging a send over in the mixer window. You don't have to care about channels, routing, whatever, just drag that thing over and it becomes its own copy of the send you can manipulate with. Now imagine you could drag sends ANYWHERE in the FX chain and the send would just pass its channel audio tracks through (no matter how many!) and also send them to the destination. Voila, automatic, manageable, storable, templateable, copyable. This is what ardour does, and what I'm missing in reaper.

    • @Wergiftfresch
      @Wergiftfresch 2 года назад

      @@simongunkel7457 also you are aware that if I do that before e.g. a ReaComp, by default now I have the side-chain inputs connected to the FX-send of the previous FX (or some earlier FX, generally). It's just annoying and too involved, and especially fragile and not flexible. I wish cockos would just add a generic "send" and "receive" FX between which we could drag and drop and which were stable across tracks (so you could copy them). I don't get the distinction between FX and sends/receives generally in reaper, if you can do midi, audio and video in the same track (annoyingly always stereo, but hey), why can't you do sends and FX as the same abstraction?

  • @magicchord
    @magicchord 2 года назад +1

    You reminded me that I can use a variation on the comb filtering trick on an old project of mine with a single mono drum overhead. Turning the mono drums into Fake Stereo, which sits in the mix more nicely.

    • @magicchord
      @magicchord 2 года назад +1

      I made a "comb" track with a high-pass filter (to keep the kick in the center) feeding a delay (I set it for 5ms delay). Send panned to hard L, another send phase-flipped to hard R. Mix with the mono drums by ear.

  • @syncronized_entity
    @syncronized_entity 2 года назад

    Great video! Love it.

  • @LucaMiolla
    @LucaMiolla 2 года назад +2

    That's actually the reason why I switched to Cubase many years ago.
    I was baffled how people need to load a plugin in Pro Tools just to flip polarity :'D it's like they enjoy suffering.
    It feels there's some sort of forced silence about it, it's actually the first time I hear somebody rooting for a DAW this strongly :D
    These videos are pure gold, thank you very much for the trick!

  • @simonrussell77
    @simonrussell77 4 месяца назад

    Using Soothe feeding in a sidechain of what is losing focus is a good one for this, very effective.

  • @barx3218
    @barx3218 2 года назад +3

    Your knowledge is so valuable Dan, thank you for sharing it. And your engineer's dry wit is the icing on the cake. Is there a plug-in for that?

    • @laurenpinschannels
      @laurenpinschannels 2 года назад +1

      you might be able to get some humor out of a VST implementation of a language model, but I don't think there are any VSTs that implement that level of artificial intelligence yet and they certainly don't have any controls for decibel level of the humor it outputs. might be something to check into in a future multimedia version of VCV rack or something like that. I'm looking forward to audio rate humor modulation

  • @tenison7990
    @tenison7990 2 года назад

    the mic drop when he zoomed on the send polarity switch. Amazing

  • @matthiasschaaff7083
    @matthiasschaaff7083 2 года назад +4

    Reaper rules in so many ways! I've come from Pro Tools (as most of you i asume) and working with PT had always a little bit of what you can't do. So when i startet learning Reaper i was shocked of what it is capable of! I found new very useful features and workflows every day and session i did. Now I'm using Reaper for about 4 years and I'm still super happy. Won't go back. Cheers

    • @JohnSmith-pn2vl
      @JohnSmith-pn2vl 2 года назад +4

      well, coming from pro tools, everything is a huge upgrade lol xD

    • @YuriKovalyov
      @YuriKovalyov 2 года назад

      It's like leaving a wife with children (projects) for a younger sexy chick. This is disgusting.

  • @kirkegodfrey414
    @kirkegodfrey414 2 года назад

    Bloody hellllllll. Such elegant info. 👂☑️ thank you.

  • @donartyone3258
    @donartyone3258 2 года назад

    Thanks for the tip Dan! As a Logic Pro X user I’ll usually add the gain plugin for a polarity flip. It really should be on the channel and Aux sends. Also, nice beat!

  • @DThompson55
    @DThompson55 2 года назад

    Brilliant! Just Brilliant! Sick and Brilliant!

  • @chip715715
    @chip715715 2 года назад +1

    always here for your video dan! I have been following you for a while, and I click on every video you make. (also ableton gang)

  • @ReckDemon
    @ReckDemon Год назад

    You can easily flip the polarity with in Ableton using a stock device that can be added to busses too. It can even switch left and right channel independently or both.

  • @stayover7315
    @stayover7315 2 года назад +4

    You could replicate this in Ableton by creating an audio track, grouping stock Compressors into parallel chains, setting the sidechain sources to be the tracks you want to hear, and auditioning all of them to effectively disable the compressors and just hear the sidechain signal. Add your delay after this group, then you can invert signals as you please. Send the track to whatever reverb return you have.

  • @ertugrullgul
    @ertugrullgul 2 года назад +8

    In my opinion the two biggest deficiencies of Reaper are pre-fx volume knob per channel and post fader fx inserts. These are very useful features and could be implemented easily. Dan, I know that the developers are consider your requests. Can you please help us to make them see these requests?

  • @evlosolve
    @evlosolve 2 года назад +6

    That’s really nice! I guess as a workaround, you can set up a separate send that just inverts polarity, before going into the delay, if you want to do this in a different daw :)

  • @jensharald9091
    @jensharald9091 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @JuanMotta
    @JuanMotta 2 года назад

    Thank you!!!!!

  • @MerajTypeBeat
    @MerajTypeBeat 2 года назад

    Love Reaper so much! 🔥

  • @riyazsonday7025
    @riyazsonday7025 2 года назад

    I literally clicked the clickbait and then heard your voice, was shocked, but always happy for some content from this channel :)

  • @PocketSunlight
    @PocketSunlight 11 месяцев назад

    Brilliant!

  • @IgniteAMR
    @IgniteAMR 2 года назад

    You can do all this in Logic with the stock Stereo delay, either on a mono channel or on a Buss/Aux. Wet/Dry, phase invert L/R, high/low pass with gentle slopes, all settings can be tweaked linked or unlinked

  • @clamr6122
    @clamr6122 2 года назад +1

    What a fantastic trick! Any chance you could recommend a book with more ideas like this?

  • @AnimusInvidious
    @AnimusInvidious 2 года назад

    Cool trick!

  • @joeygwood
    @joeygwood 2 года назад +8

    I recently switched from Logic to Reaper for mixing for similar reasons. I love the freedom it gives you with routing and the ability to optimize your workflow through customization. However, I still think Logic is superior for multitrack recording. The way it handles takes, comping, and group editing is incredibly intuitive.

    • @nectariosm
      @nectariosm 2 года назад +1

      Luckily Reaper does not suffer from bugs. I can't use Logic because of the playhead jumping back bug, that other people have reported as well. Apparently it appeared from v10.5 onwards.

    • @kultw1837
      @kultw1837 2 года назад

      @@nectariosm I have never experienced this and playhead bugs that have happened have been fixed by reopening the project, not affecting workflow.

    • @nectariosm
      @nectariosm 2 года назад +1

      @@kultw1837 I have been using Logic since V 4.xx and stopped using it when it went to V10. So after a few years I had to use Logic again and I installed 10.7.2 and it had this bug. I never saw it in the 15 years I was using Logic either. Re-openning the project and trying out different play start preferences does not change the problem. Weird..

    • @kultw1837
      @kultw1837 2 года назад

      @@nectariosm maybe its about the hardware. I have been using logic since 2014 so only v10 onwards

  • @insertanynameyouwant5311
    @insertanynameyouwant5311 2 года назад

    ooh nice pls more tips like this!

  • @notbatman1001
    @notbatman1001 2 года назад +6

    Thank-you for using the correct terminology of 'polarity'. I guess 'phase' just fits better on the console.

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +7

      Phase is also correct, just less specific.

    • @RP-vq4wd
      @RP-vq4wd 2 года назад

      Polarity= + & - Phase = 0- 180°

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +2

      @@RP-vq4wd a polarity flip causes 180 degrees of phase shift. Therefore calling it "phase" is not incorrect.

    • @matthijshebly
      @matthijshebly 2 года назад

      @@DanWorrall Although I guess "phase" is more of a "time" thing, i.e. horizontal if we were to plot a wave with time as the X axis, whereas polarity is more of an "amplitude" thing, dealing with the Y axis... Phase is a time shift, Polarity is an amplitude multiplication by -1.

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +2

      @@matthijshebly phase doesn't have to be a time shift. Polarity flip being the most obvious example, but I also have plugins that can shift phase by an arbitrary angle.

  • @Mansardian
    @Mansardian 2 года назад +8

    Even the built-in plugin parameter-link with manual offset sets Reaper apart. Control the threshold of three serial compressors (FET, opto, limiter, for instance) simultaneously, with their own offsets, by tweaking ONE mixer knob? Reaper can do it. Save the chain and load that configuration whereever you need it, all set up with that one fx parameter knob in your mixer. It's like building your own unique one-knob compressor.

    • @anteshell
      @anteshell 2 года назад +1

      "It's like building your own unique one-knob compressor."
      I don't think that is accurate at all. The more accurate analogue would be creating a preset that uses multiple plugins. Afterall, tweaking compressor threshold and other values is not quite the same as building a compressor itself.

    • @Mansardian
      @Mansardian 2 года назад

      @@anteshell Listen, I don't want to offend you, but you clearly didn't understand the logic or mechanics of my example. The threshold setting was only one kind of parameter. the attack times can be linked to the threshold as well. So can the ratio or the release. Let's say you lower the treshold and, at the same time, increase the attack time plus decreasing the ratio.
      Do you understand now? By saying "it's like building your own unique one-knob compressor" I meant the workflow. One knob on the mixer panel. And by unique I mean: you can adjust it to taste and create your own 2-stage attack, 3-stage release or whatever. You get a channel compression with a particular sound and you define which one.

    • @anteshell
      @anteshell 2 года назад

      @@Mansardian Sorry to break it to you but your ridiculous insinuations that I'm some fucking moron is just laughable. Not offending. But when you set the stage like that, I'm happy to oblige and consider you to be an idiot too.
      It is very clear from your comment that my above assesment is not far from the truth. In my comment I specifically said "_and other values_" which means exactly that; those other values that you keep complaining I somehow ignored.
      Screwing one comp is nothing more than making a preset. Screwing two comps is nothing more than making a preset. Screwing three comps and linking those parameters together is still nothing more than making a preset.
      I've been making patches in FL patcher long enough to understand that linking parameters together no matter how many and with how complicated curves, it is still nothing like making a new plugin from scratch. It is making a preset. Potentially more complicated preset than the used plugins ever was, but still nothing more than that.
      Now.. are you possibly ready to continue discussion as a civilized adult or do you still want to act like a dumb fuck? I would rather choose the former. In fact, I'd love that, but I do not want to continue myself if this kind of shit talk is all you can do.

    • @gregmark1688
      @gregmark1688 2 года назад +1

      @@anteshell Did you really think he meant to say "saving that preset is just like the effort involved in coding up your own one-knob compressor"? I'm pretty sure he meant what I heard him say, that using it is like using a one-knob compressor of your own custom design -- which it is. As for linking parameters, how do you think a one-knob compressor works?
      And as for being civilized adults ... well, you really don't want to have gone there, but you did. One of you said "I don't want to offend you", while the other said "your insinuations are ridiculous, and I'd be happy to consider you an idiot". Guess which one probably seems the more "civilized adult" to the rest of us?

    • @TjMoon91
      @TjMoon91 2 года назад

      Is that a rare feature in DAWs?
      It’s fairly simple to to in Ableton with Effect Rack macros

  • @Mansardian
    @Mansardian 2 года назад +2

    With the latest Reaper update, built-in per-FX oversampling is implemented. Over are the days of ReaEQ's frequency cramping or aliasing of distortion plugins which didn't provide OS.... (if you didn't want to set the whole session to a higher SR)

    • @voinrima
      @voinrima 2 месяца назад

      Reaper seems to have the best stock plugins, as a Cubase fan I must admit that

  • @MIHAO
    @MIHAO 2 года назад

    thanks!

  • @cjcurcio
    @cjcurcio Год назад

    Routing in Reaper is superbly intuitive!

  • @cjcurcio
    @cjcurcio Год назад +1

    I love Reaper!!

  • @shaihulud4515
    @shaihulud4515 2 года назад

    I am not sure, if I really understood the super seperator trick at all - but speaking about Reaper: being able to route whatever wherever I like, pretty sums it all up for me! I was using Samplitude for use, starting with V7, all the way up to 10, and following it further until version Pro X3. I realized that with every new iteration I was paying for useless add ons (useless for me at least), and 3rd party stuff. While bugs remained untouched, some of whom felt like features over time. A good year ago, I went over to Reaper - man, I really ain't looking back!

  • @drrodopszin
    @drrodopszin 2 года назад

    Sounds like a good thing to put it in a JS plugin. I have accidentally found that there are Splitters in the JS folder as well that might use the same trick you used (at least inverting the original signal nulled the output of the splitter). The FFT Splitter had a boost somehow at the crossover frequency but the others did the trick.

  • @lassorb4752
    @lassorb4752 2 года назад

    Omfg, Dan! This is godlike

  • @FVDaudio
    @FVDaudio 2 года назад

    Perhaps, just for my needs, I would like 2 implementations. Number 1: being able to conveniently assign the Solo output bus or output port routing (only limited by the hardware interface) and not only through the main output as it is today (it is also not solved by creating additional auxiliary output channels). That would give me the power of the AFL/PFL like in the best mixing consoles. Number 2: It was the ability to conveniently assign the point on the channel/bus/main; polarity, since I have found it necessary to invert it from the properties of the item or sample, due to (for example) cancellations in reverb effects on parallel channels, but this explanation of yours has totally solved my own carelessness in the use of the aux sends. Otherwise! is the best and most powerful DAW in existence.

  • @monkeyplusplus
    @monkeyplusplus 2 года назад +1

    As probably your only regular viewer who also uses Reason as their main DAW, it's always fun to replicate these tricks as an exercise of how well I know my weirdo DAW of choice 😂

    • @monkeyplusplus
      @monkeyplusplus 2 года назад +1

      In case any other Reason folks are here, the way I replicated this is to just create parallels for both channels and route the output of those to a new mix track. Then place the effect as an insert in that third mix track. You can then invert one of the parallels. The reverb thing is the same, just set it up as a send on all three tracks. You could also do it without the parallel channels by splitting off a copy of each track to another mix channel using the Spider and include some other way of inverting one track's inputs (like the Itsy Audio Phase Inverter) along the way.

  • @plaguelordrapture
    @plaguelordrapture 2 года назад

    I've been doing a similar version of this trick to fit synths and strings into dense tracks.
    I used to do it in a really ratchet way though. I take an instance of NadIR (typically a stereo IR loader for guitars), set to mono, hi and lo pass the left side to taste, mix to 50% and then I mess with the delay setting until I hear a phase shift that makes the track sit right without removing too much of its main properties.

  • @simonpreston
    @simonpreston 2 года назад +1

    Workflow is key for getting work done. There is little point in having a DAW with loads of features and tricks, but you have no idea how to use it. I've seen people buy an expensive Apple Mac, with pricey software because 'they need it to make music', then find they still can't make music as they don't how to use what they've just purchased. Thousands of pounds spunked up the wall with nothing to show for it.
    I recently started making tunes in Ableton. I've been making DJ mixes for years in it, and knew my way around, so it made sense to continue with that. It worked nicely for my purposes. I have made a few tunes, and have quite a lot of 'nearly there' projects. I've been able to learn more about the music making process, without the blocker of having to learn the DAW, first.
    So yes, there is a lot of truth to 'the one you know'. But it's also true that some other DAW has a feature you really want. There is no perfect DAW that satisfies everyone. But that's fine.

    • @Bthelick
      @Bthelick 2 года назад

      yup. as I wrote above.
      I use live for electronic composition ,production , sound design and mix mastering. You really can't beat the workflow for speed and that counts for a hell of a lot now. If I had more time I would go back to reaper as it is indeed more flexible but music is my living and music has deadlines and algorithms to please haha. When you get 80 million views on a track that took you 6 hours you kinda realise spending an extra week getting the mix perfect isn't actually a factor in A) paying the bills and B) other people's ears. its not enough of a difference to truly matter in the real world (unless your brand's audience just happens to be exclusively made up of engineers)

  • @streck0486
    @streck0486 2 года назад +1

    I use Ableton Live and Reaper. Which one I choose depends on what I want to. I much prefer Ableton for sketching ideas and arranging using lots of soft-synth and MIDI. But Reaper is my weapon of choice for tracking audio, mixing and mastering (or at least pretending to do so).

  • @tegenfase
    @tegenfase 2 года назад +2

    If you go to the Advanced tab in Project Settings (Alt+Enter) you can actually toggle an option to allow feedback in routing! I think this used to be default because I definitely damaged my hearing by messing that up once x)

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +2

      Yeah. But there's a buffer of delay inside that feedback loop, and it also breaks PDC.

  • @franckydookie
    @franckydookie 2 года назад

    I used 2 synth on a song, but when i switched one on the seconds tends to disappear a little bit, so I used this trick to find what frequencies what walking on each other, and what frequencies were best to boost on each synths, and it worked great

  • @Bluelagoonstudios
    @Bluelagoonstudios 2 года назад +5

    I'm using Reaper since 2 years, started yesterday eve for a third, I come from my first DAW Cubase in the 80's with a few samplers, like the S1 from Roland, and a digi piano, the D70 and a AKAI sampler. It was good for that time setting. Went to Ableton, because I was looking for a DAW that was good for editing, and also live use with a APC40mkII, playing those clips, was a great feature to play live music. Then I quit being DJ, so I took the best a man can get (sic) Protools9HD. Besides, it's so expensive and the fact, you have to restart PT for several times. When I noticed the price for PT10, I was looking for something cheaper and if it could a little more stable. A colleague get me into Reaper, And me and the DAW both fell in love, and it's now my main DAW, Still using the apc40mkII and Ableton, for DJing from time to time, I have on my system really great tools, all very cheap, but with people who care for their clients. Never seen so many tutorials from Kenny and Jon, Kenny for the basic stuff, Jon a little more for the experienced users. And not to forget, the stash with scripts, and the community where you can almost every hour of the day can ask questions. For me, this software is a no-brainer. Cheap prices, you can change pretty much every aspect from the GUI, Shortcuts are so easy to make, you can even make your own scripts. Without locking your software, and every day I learn a new feature after an update or one I didn't aware of. Cheers. PS: Yeah the stock plugins looks like the GUI's screens from Cubase, but they are doing the trick. Dan made a video about them in earlier episodes.

    • @aadityagoswami
      @aadityagoswami 2 года назад +1

      Jon who? Would like to check their stuff out!

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/user/TheREAPERBlog

    • @lolilollolilol7773
      @lolilollolilol7773 2 года назад

      There is a new channel that is very much worth looking into, it's IDDQD Sound. A bit geeky, with lots of tricks and long videos about scripting. Plus the recent interviews of Justin Frankel, Jon Schwartz and Kenny Gioia.
      ruclips.net/user/IDDQDMusic

  • @StaminaMC
    @StaminaMC 2 года назад +1

    I hear a difference even on iPad speakers. That’s cool. 😎

  • @maorlubin4768
    @maorlubin4768 2 года назад +1

    hey dan ,
    im totally speechless by the amount of creativity and knowledge
    i just wonder to myself how did you manage to measure the phase of both using plugin doctor
    thx in advance !!

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +1

      In actually measuring the frequency response not the phase shift. I loaded Metaplugin into the doctor, then set up the parallel routing inside that. And I saved the curve with the delay in phase so you can still see it after I flipped the polarity.

    • @maorlubin4768
      @maorlubin4768 2 года назад

      @@DanWorrall almost made it , but i have no clue how to flip the polarity in metaplugin :/ ,
      thx alot for your time again !

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +1

      Me neither. I loaded a Pro-Q3 just to flip the polarity. Other polarity flipping plugins are available. Sorry, that was an important detail!

  • @Jrel
    @Jrel 2 года назад

    Great video and I love the result! I have always used Waves InPhase or Voxengo PHA to make extra-phasey analog synths sit in a mix. I would like to see if my workflow can come close or match your results. Would you be willing offer a download link of a short 4 bar or 8 bar loop of those phasey synth sounds from your song please; same section as the one in your video possible?

  • @IAmMinnian
    @IAmMinnian Год назад

    First of all thank you for ALL of the clear and concise explanations of these advanced mixing techniques. In that same spirit, I'll do the same with my question.
    BUT...
    Could the difference in the A/B test just be due to a change in level after combining the delayed/inverted signal?

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  Год назад +2

      The parts seem to get louder with the parallel channel added, and perhaps actually do a bit, because I've tuned the comb filtering to pick out important frequencies in both parts. If I tune it badly, or invert it to create the opposite, there is no perceived loudness boost. Remember that the parallel channel doesn't simply add to the dry signals due to the delay: it creates comb filtering with as many cuts as boosts.

  • @FirebrandVOCALS
    @FirebrandVOCALS 15 дней назад

    Learn all Daws and love the one you choose to use, because that’s the best DAW for you.

  • @user-sd7eb6jq9y
    @user-sd7eb6jq9y 2 года назад +1

    Reaper is the one that not only I know best, but the one that helped me do the stuff that other DAWs wouldnt. So its the best DAW for me.

  • @mageprometheus
    @mageprometheus 2 года назад

    In project settings | advanced there is 'Allow feedback in routing'. Good for having the midi and audio on the same track and Kontakt on another.

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад

      That will break PDC. I *need* working PDC, that's a deal-breaker for me.

  • @codeeye2023
    @codeeye2023 2 года назад +1

    Well it's true for me too reaper is a DAW on a whole another level in every aspect of audio production. Period!

  • @ethai1
    @ethai1 2 года назад +1

    30 seconds in and I'm already reminded why I'm subbed in the first place. Daw wars should be a thing of the past.

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад

      I'm afraid I'm about to spoil it all :)

    • @ethai1
      @ethai1 2 года назад

      @@DanWorrall Ok so now that I finished the video I understand what you mean haha
      I'm fine with someone respectfully explaining why he prefers one daw over the other (Benn Jordan did a great video where he tried Ableton Live for the first time and what he thought of it) but I generally don't like the whole "lol ur music sucks cuz you use ____ and not ____!"
      (You were joking when you said other daws suck if they can't do that, right?)

    • @DanWorrall
      @DanWorrall  2 года назад +4

      @@ethai1 they suck because I haven't learnt how to use them :)

    • @ethai1
      @ethai1 2 года назад

      @@DanWorrall See? Now I appreciate you even more :)
      Jokes aside, I'm not a Reaper user but one thing I really appreciate about it, before we're even talking about technical aspects, is the business model. Demo it for as long as you want, and the license itself is cheap compared to other daws. Gotta appreciate that.
      And if we go into more technical stuff, I just love that you can assign shortcuts to load specific plugins.

  • @GrandCommanderMusic
    @GrandCommanderMusic 2 года назад +1

    If reaper had playlists and track based group editing, I think it could take over the world. Everything else about it is fantastic.

    • @GrandCommanderMusic
      @GrandCommanderMusic Год назад

      @@ranajoyshil oh yeah, I just posted a thank you in the forums for the track based group editing. So happy about it!

  • @jaydy71
    @jaydy71 2 года назад +5

    Reaper is basically the only DAW that I'd consider if I'd want to move away from Cubase for mixing (which I sometimes do, especially at times where I have to deal with licensing stuff there). But hey, Cubase still works for me rather brilliantly (and it also has a quick to access polarity switch in the mixer).
    But Reaper seems to have some quite fundamental features that makes it really interesting to me; it seems really flexible with many really creative possibilities if you are willing to go down and dirty with scripts etc.

    • @BojanBojovic
      @BojanBojovic 2 года назад +1

      My problem with Cubase is in the feel, it has confusing contrasts and colours although it can be tweaked to some extent now, then the icons, so many of them and all very difficult to differentiate. And the worst part is actually the number of clicks per action, and so many windows popping up all the time. What I find interesting is that I used it from VST24 to Cubase 5.1, then moved to Pro Tools, so I know the software relatively well.
      Reaper was not known for being beautiful from day one, but it got simplified over the years and now it looks very good stock, however some contrasts and colours could be improved still.
      This is what Pro Tools does the best, since version 8 it looks well defined, simple and it does not cause any eye strain with its good contrast/colour combination.

    • @bazjaddley6369
      @bazjaddley6369 2 года назад +3

      Reaper is so tweakable things like a polarity switch in the mixer are only a menu away to set forever

    • @jaydy71
      @jaydy71 2 года назад

      @@BojanBojovic I dunno, I've worked with Cubase so long (since it was just a MIDI sequencer on the Atari ST basically) that it just feels natural to me. Things are quite tweakable these days and things did get more streamlined over the years. There has been a time where Cubase was starting to feel quite clunky, but I think they did a good job in streamlining stuff better over the years. There are always some little niggles of course, but by and large I still find it a joy to work with and I can work very fast in Cubase.
      This probably has a lot to do with me being so used to it, but something I really love about Cubase is just how complete and integrated it feels out of the box. For so many things you don't even need plugins, it's just right there.
      So while I don't really feel the need to look elsewhere yet, Reaper has always fascinated me. It generally seems so incredibly well designed and flexible from the foundations of it, that it might tip me over at some point. At least as a secondary DAW to get the creative juices flowing in different ways.
      I like ProTools as well, it feels quite clean and focused to me, but I'd still miss some of Cubase's richness if I were to switch over. I feel Reaper has a good chance to win over a lot of ProTools guys/gals.

  • @mesamarshall
    @mesamarshall 2 года назад +5

    Cool trick and nice video. However, I'm too used to using Cubase/Nuendo.
    One time, someone handed me a Reaper session and I had to edit an upright bass track. I thought that it would just be quicker and a nice opportunity to learn editing in Reaper. After 3 hours of of not finnishing the edits, I gave up and went to sleep. The next day, I moved everything into Cubase and had all the edits done in about 20 minutes.
    And we should have in mind that there are always (pretty much) workarounds for these types of tricks showed in the video.
    Love your videos (the ones on this channel and the ones on Fabfilter's) and the scientific ways you approach thinking about audio.
    Cheers!

    • @TwoScoopsOfTubert
      @TwoScoopsOfTubert 2 года назад +4

      I'm a Cubase-to-Reaper convert. Reaper is so far the closest thing to Cubase that I've tried (I've tried two others and can't stand them) so with the immense price difference I figured it was worth the learning curve. And so far I'm happy I made the switch, Reaper is not only inexpensive and essentially unlimited in functionality, it's also VERY customizable. You can change almost anything to act almost any way that might be more intuitive to your workflow.

    • @Crazyfistish
      @Crazyfistish 2 года назад +1

      I started on Reaper, then convinced myself to move over to a "proper" DAW and chose Nuendo. I don't know what I was thinking!

    • @mesamarshall
      @mesamarshall 2 года назад +1

      @@TwoScoopsOfTubert I know Reaper is the smart choice and the most costumizable DAW, but Nuendo suits all my needs (still haven't found something I need to do that I haven't been able to). Furthermore, since I'm used to it's workflow, there's less faffing about with settings when I install it in a fresh system, just some minor aesthetic adjustments and a couple of keyboard shortcuts.

    • @mesamarshall
      @mesamarshall 2 года назад +1

      @@Crazyfistish Reaper is great, there's no need to change. I'm actually kind of sorry for myself for not having started out with Reaper and being used to it's workflow. If that were the case, maybe I would be using it today instead of a more costly option

    • @TwoScoopsOfTubert
      @TwoScoopsOfTubert 2 года назад +1

      @@mesamarshall Yup for sure! Just goes to show how every-sided this can be :)

  • @pedrovaz3301
    @pedrovaz3301 2 года назад

    Genious!

  • @olivierclasse
    @olivierclasse 2 года назад

    Thanks Dan, I hope one day, daws without polarity btn will sell this revolutionary addition of this polarity btn in an update. 😛 in btw those with polarity flip embeded in a gain plug-in (logic , abelton) also works on sends.

  • @electricwhiterabbit
    @electricwhiterabbit 2 года назад +1

    Come to think of it, I have never used the phase polarity switch on my send in Reaper and never thought as to even what it would be used for. Now I know. Gotta say Reaper is a pretty awesome DAW. As powerful as any out there.

    • @gregmark1688
      @gregmark1688 2 года назад +2

      No other DAW has a built-in language to let you write your own plugins, so I'm gonna say "more powerful than any out there".

  • @georgeg4136
    @georgeg4136 2 года назад

    Thank you very much for the knowledge you share with us, just a remark, I would like, if possible, clearer audio examples.

  • @gustavokoshikumo
    @gustavokoshikumo 2 года назад +1

    great tip, i´m returning to Reaper now and falling in love again. But there´s one feature that I miss the most as an Ableton user too: FX Rack. I know it´s an old request by users, but +1 :P

  • @bonerici
    @bonerici 2 года назад +2

    Watching this video on my cell phone and every time he said "listen to the difference" I'm like "sounds all the same!". Agree tho that reaper has incredible power especially in those actions you type in. I still like Ableton better I'm used to it but some things it's worth it going to reaper even though I'm completely lost.

  • @mitchellthornton8423
    @mitchellthornton8423 2 года назад

    I watched the video that came after this and I have to say I can hear the effect 10x easier in this one lol

  • @redbigapplefloppa302
    @redbigapplefloppa302 11 месяцев назад

    I think the fl studio mixer with it's modular design in combination with the various native sidechaining plugins is the one with the most utility for mixing

    • @redbigapplefloppa302
      @redbigapplefloppa302 11 месяцев назад

      And of course there's the flip polarity button for every channel. Aux send etc (you can basically do everything with every channel)

  • @Glamatory
    @Glamatory 2 года назад

    Samplitude also has polarity flip for aux sends plus some more spatial controls :) Samplitude is one of the mightiest DAWs regarding control and should be much more well-known :D