To some degree, the more of your own tools you make and use, the more "yours" your sound gets. IRs are really very easy to make, and the equipment is easy and cheap to get.
You need:
A handheld recorder (stereo is very much preferable - M-Audio's MicroTrack 2496 is perfect, and supplies phantom power so you can use a pair of good condenser mics if you have them)
Something to make a quick, sharp sound with. There are a million ways to do this. A starter pistol would be ideal, but you can use firecrackers, the snapping of a leather belt or even a hand clap.
And that's really all there as far as equipment. Find an environment that has a reverb that's appealing to you like an alley, parking garage, your bathroom, whatever.
- Hit record.
- Make your noise.
- Edit your recording so you just have the sound you made and the resulting reverb. Drop that whole sample into the Convolution Reverb module and bam - you're now listening to your audio through the environment you recorded.
/.e
Rolling your own Impulse ResponsesModerators: Christophe, Mark
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Rolling your own Impulse ResponsesPhreque.com - Weapons-Grade Awesome.
Rolling your own Impulse Responses/or use deconvolution softwares on sine ramps recorded...
the quality of the record is essential as you said... Orion 8, Live 8Le, Cubase 4 LE, Cantana, APC40, UC16, Fostex PM1MKII, Q9550, 4G0, 1,5T, 22"+15"
http://soundcloud.com/eklectro/i-like-xylo-29-03-2011
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