yes..I also do that in daw, slightly delay one channel and panning..bur
right now I�m not using a computer at all for music, I do all my work from
there so when I make music i like to get away from it!
thanks for your answers :)
Flanging, chorusing, phasing and the like are very similar to that effect,
so you may want to look into the A-125 or the lower numbered A-188-1s.
There are other ways of widening a sound too. After watching the making of
Nirvana's Nevermind, I just started doing what apparently pretty much
everyone used to do, which is recording some parts twice, and panning the
two recordings separately. This works particularly well with slightly
unstable modules like the A-106-1, which will sound everso slightly
different on each take, giving you an interesting stereo effect. The only
hard part then is to replicate all your expert knob twiddling in each take,
but if you need to do it precisely, you can always draw the movements in
your DAW and send them out over MIDI CC channels via a good MIDI to CV
converter such as the venerable MCV-24.
The technique you're doing, duplicating the exact recording and offsetting
it slightly, is also good, and can just as easily be done with recordings
of modulars. Personally, I wouldn't try to change that technique by
replacing the DAW with a module or two. I think a modular synth is a fine
instrument, but a DAW is still necessary to do the actual recording and
editing. :)
--
Mvh
Peter H.K Sedin
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