Chankgeez wrote:Yeah, "warm" would be a fairly balanced frequency range. "Cold" is definitely less body and a harsh sounding top end. A lot of flangers definitely cut low end. Those're the ones I generally avoid. I don't want the entire bottom of my signal to drop out when I stomp a flanger on.
Most of the warmest sounding I've heard are a lot of the cheap '80s flangers. Off-brands like Yamaha, Korg, Pearl, Guyatone, Aria. Stuff like that. I don't know if it's the quality (or lack thereof) of the chips they used or what?
If you're going the digital route with your design, it might not be too difficult to emulate that with filtering.
Yes - filtering might be quite important...
I love my old purple Boss flanger.
You know back when I was a tape op in a big recording studio, we had an old engineer come in for a session, who was present on one of the first occasions when they discovered flanging - when they'd play two tape recorders with exactly the same audio tape on each - started at the same time - and someone would skim their thumb on the outside flange of one tape reel.... When the right lucky syncronisation happened and the audio would start the magical rise and fall effect...
'But didn't all the low-end drop away??' I asked him.
'Yeah - but we didn't care! It was
flanging!!!'
Things have come a long way since then.
I think it'd be important to not have your tone messed up.