![]() ![]() They want to hear the color the plugin can impart on their track and work up from there. This is done by design – nobody wants to load a plugin up and hear the sound they’ve been building immediately decimated. The default settings of most plugins change the sound enough to give you an idea of the character a plugin has, but not so much that it overwhelms you. If you’re using a plugin developed specifically for bass such as Bassforge Hellraiser or BG-Bass, you should be able to start hearing a relatively useful sound from the minute you load up the plugin. Let me walk you through how I do that with every new plugin I get. ![]() As a mixer, it’s important to go through presets not only to find the ones you like, but learn how your plugin works. Plugins with hundreds of presets can be just as bad if they’re 90% garbage and 10% useful – you’re the one needs to sift through them all and find the good ones (a tedious and time-consuming task).Īs a plugin developer, it’s all about finding the balance of enough options to work with but not so many that users get overloaded with choices. Plugins that have a single preset called “bass” can feel underwhelming when you’ve been mixing for a while. The short answer is: of course you can! But do you know what to look for? With so many various plugins available, it can be hard to give as much credit to some of their presets as you can with others.
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