Lynda.com – Foundations of Audio: Reverb – UPDATE (TUTORIAL)

By | December 14, 2025

 

Year: 2014
Producer: Lynda.com
Producer’s Website: www.lynda.com/Audio-tutorials/Foundations-Audio-Reverb/89707-2.html
Author: Alex U. Case
Duration: 03:05:00
Type of Material Handout: Video Lesson
Language: English


Description: This course explains one of the most important ingredients in audio mixing. Reverb is the time it takes for sound to reflect, echo, and decay during a live performance or recording. Reverb gives your recordings a natural richness that can be recreated. In this course, producer and engineer Alex U. Case covers acoustics, mechanical and digital devices for creating reverb, and diagrams of parameters (room size, density, etc.) you need to know to take advantage of the original recorded space and expand its impact. This installation of Foundations of Audio explains one of the most essential ingredients in audio mixing, reverb—the time it takes for sound to bounce, echo, and decay during a live performance or recording. Reverb gives a natural richness to your recordings, which is possible to reproduce. Producer and audio engineer Alex U. Case covers the acoustic, mechanical, and digital means for creating reverb, and charts the parameters (room size, density, etc.) you’ll need to know to take advantage of the original recording space and enhance it in post. He then shows how to simulate reverb digitally with effects, adding timbre, texture, and contrast, and improve the sound of your mixes with a sense of space and depth.
These techniques can be practiced with the free Get in the Mix sessions, currently available for Pro Tools and Logic Pro.

Topics include :
– What is reverb?
– Understanding how acoustic reverb works in rooms
– Working with the signal flow, effects loops, and available CPU resources
– Understanding core parameters, like reverb time and pre-delay
– Simulating space
– Creating nonlinear reverb
– Building pre-delay effects
– Using reverse reverb
– Using convolution correctly

Content :
0. Introduction 9m 41s
Welcome 1m 58s
What do you need to know before watching this course 2m 18s
Songs you should listen to while watching this course 2m 46s
Using the exercise files 55s
Using the Get in the Mix session files 1m 44s

  1. Understanding Reverberation 6m 44s
    What is reverb? 2m 35s
    Why do we use reverb? 4m 9s
  2. Technologies for Creating Reverb 24m 33s
    Capturing reverb acoustically through room tracks 5m 33s
    Creating reverb acoustically through a reverb chamber 2m 51s
    Creating reverb mechanically using springs and plates 5m 8s
    Creating reverb digitally via algorithms and convolution 4m 51s
    Optimizing signal flow, effects loops, and CPU resources 6m 10s
  3. Key Parameters and Reference Values ​​39m 10s
    The anatomy of reverberation 3m 8s
    Mastering reverb time, predelay, and wet/dry mix parameters 5m 36s
    Understanding the frequency dependence of reverberation 4m 56s
    Tapping into advanced parameters such as diffusion, density, and more 4m 37s
    Reference values ​​from the best orchestra halls 5m 40s
    Hearing beyond the basic parameters 5m 31s
    Touring the interfaces for six reverb plugins 9m 42s
  4. Reverb Techniques 1h 32m
    Choosing the right reverb for each of your tracks 2m 17s
    Simulating space with reverb 5m 42s
    Hearing space in the mix 6m 33s
    Timbre and texture 3m 36s
    Shaping tone and timbre with reverb 5m 49s
    Creating contrasting sounds for your tracks 4m 43s
    Using nonlinear reverb to help a track cut through 4m 25s
    Emphasizing the reverb using predelay 3m 24s
    Strategically blurring and obscuring tracks 1m 46s
    Get in the Mix: Changing the scene by changing reverb UPDATED 7m 37s
    Get in the Mix: Gating reverb to emphasize any track in your production UPDATED 5m 52s
    Reversing reverb to highlight musical moments 9m 36s
    Synthesizing new sounds through reverb 6m 42s
    Get in the Mix: Supporting a track with regenerative reverb UPDATED 6m 31s
    Getting the most out of room tracks 17m 39s
  5. Advanced Reverb Topics 11m 32s
    Setting up your own reverb chamber: The architecture 2m 2s
    Setting up your own reverb chamber: The audio 4m 8s
    Using convolution correctly 2m 32s
    Getting great impluse response 2m 50s

6.Conclusion 1m 29s
Next steps 1m 29s

Example files: present
Format Video: MOV
Video: AVC, 960×540, 16:9, 23.976 fps, ~1177 kbps
Audio: AAC, 48.0 kHz, ~160 kbps, 2 channels



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