Can you give me some songs with Reverberation (reverb) I need some examples.?!


Question: yeahh, I'd just like to understand how it works better, like how other bands used it,
so what songs have that reverb?

here's the definition if you're not sure what it is:
http://www.harmony-central.com/Effects/A...


Answers: yeahh, I'd just like to understand how it works better, like how other bands used it,
so what songs have that reverb?

here's the definition if you're not sure what it is:
http://www.harmony-central.com/Effects/A...

*All* songs use reverb in some form or other. The most obvious use of it is in 80's music, especially on the snare - that huge psssssshhhhhh sound is an example of a reverb with a long decay time. However, you may not be able to hear other 'verbs as readily as those rather artifical sounding 'verbs from the 80's.

Reverb is used, in natural or artificial form, to give space and depth to instruments in a mix. Our ears expect this, and when we hear "dry" instruments we notice it and can hear it as just as fake as the over-reverbed sounds of the 80's - because they don't sound like they have a natural quality to them.

Modern reverb is mixed at very low levels and usually with very short decay times... often less than a second. Everything usually has a little 'verb on it except usually the kick drum, bass guitar, and anything else that has the bulk of its frequencies below 300-500ish hz. Reverb on bass instruments usually just makes them sound muddy. Who wants muddy bass?

Good examples of reverb... well, certain genres are built around certain styles of reverb. Rockabilly and surf guitar would not sound how they do without slapback echo - a type of reverb. Dub and reggae have a distinct form of 'verb... without reverb on the guitars you wouldn't have that spacious sound that characterizes them. Classical music is recorded in rooms that have pleasant reverb characteristics.... no digital algorithm sounds quite as good as a well-mic'd church with the right acoustic properties, for instance.

Hmmm. For an example of that plate reverb reggae/dub sound, check out Sublime's song "Bad Fish", especially the solo.

There is always reverb on vocals, whether natural or artificial. If you don't think there is, that means that the engineer did a good job at burying it in the mix.


Saul

Boulevard Of Broken Dreams - Green Day

Right at the intro.

There's an Echo & the Bunnymen album named Reverbration. But I've never heard it used in a song....

metallica uses reverb in "sanitarium" of of the album master of puppets. They use guitar and base reverb not vocal, so listen up. Guitar reverb adds the effect of playing in a large hall or other such large seated enclosed venue.



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