Ugly Bunny
Power User
I would love to see a lightweight all-in-one block that has a basic chorus, stereo delay, and reverb that costs less DSP than the three individual blocks.
This wish is more to conserve DSP on the FM3, but I think it would be handy. Oftentimes, I don't have any major delay or reverb; I just have them on for a little space so the sound isn't so dry; I wouldn't need each block's full list of parameters; maybe just some for each type of effect:
Chorus: Type, rate, depth, mix, EQ
Delay: Type, time/subdivision, feedback, mix, EQ
Reverb: Type, length, mix, predelay, EQ
...and then maybe a sort of mixer or ability to rearrange them?
I use the H9's ModEchoVerb as an example; you only get 11 parameters total, but for an all-in-one algorithm, it's pretty nice. If FAS could make it less DPS intensive than all three (or even 2?) of the blocks combined, that would be idea. I don't think it'd need to have all the types of every effect, just some basic ones like analog, digital, tape, vintage, for instance, for the delays.
Honestly, I'd be pretty happy with just a delay/verb combo block that used less DSP than one or the other.
This wish is more to conserve DSP on the FM3, but I think it would be handy. Oftentimes, I don't have any major delay or reverb; I just have them on for a little space so the sound isn't so dry; I wouldn't need each block's full list of parameters; maybe just some for each type of effect:
Chorus: Type, rate, depth, mix, EQ
Delay: Type, time/subdivision, feedback, mix, EQ
Reverb: Type, length, mix, predelay, EQ
...and then maybe a sort of mixer or ability to rearrange them?
I use the H9's ModEchoVerb as an example; you only get 11 parameters total, but for an all-in-one algorithm, it's pretty nice. If FAS could make it less DPS intensive than all three (or even 2?) of the blocks combined, that would be idea. I don't think it'd need to have all the types of every effect, just some basic ones like analog, digital, tape, vintage, for instance, for the delays.
Honestly, I'd be pretty happy with just a delay/verb combo block that used less DSP than one or the other.