
I just bought a very cheap, old, dutch-made
D&R stereo spring reverb from the 'bay. It's a bit noisy, but sounds cool. This evening I took the top off, started twanging the springs and made
this small, clangy sample pack for the
Freesound Project, who are now getting close to 10,000 sounds and 1 million downloads.
Pyoooooooing! Dubtastic! :-D
ReplyDeleteThat last one sounds just like the beginning of "In The Time of Our Lives" by Iron Butterfly (from the Ball LP)
ReplyDeleteI never though about what made that sound at the beginning of the track, but I sure know now!
Is it possible to see more snaps from your D&R spring reverb ??
ReplyDeleteThxs.
Well, Fred, there are a few more pics in this slightly embarrasing post at Sound on Sound.
ReplyDeleteooooh, neato :)
ReplyDeleteI REALLY need to get that "images with samples" feature finished!! :-S
- bram
Makes me wanna order those tank kits from Paia while I wait for the tube amp kit.
ReplyDeletePerhaps the reverbs would be smoother if you passed them through a convolution reverb :? :) hehe
ReplyDeleteEverything always sounds better with a convolution reverb.
Try spring reverb in a feedback loop (use mixer aux send back into a channel with EQ then send it back on itself..) -- when its howling start using your fingers to deaden the springs -> you can then kind of move your fingers to different harmonics points and it sounds damn fine and is mighty fun to play with.
ReplyDeleteBUGS
Can of compressed air + Spring reverb = FUN!!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.d-r.nl/dnrsite/Service%20Parts/Reverb-Spring-Service.PDF
ReplyDeletehas the schematics
Spring reverbs are the best! That timeless old-school-vibe!
ReplyDeleteany chance a guy could get a 20-20k log sweep through that sucker added to your freesound page?
ReplyDeleteSorry, Mr, I sold it to Steve Dub some time ago...
ReplyDelete