On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 01:34:27AM +0200, fons@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 12:06:29AM +0100, Andrew C wrote: > > > Personally, I find Gverb (another ladspa plug-in that can be used in > > jack-rack) to be great for adding a small amount of reverb to whatever you > > need. > > Another (probably overkill and cpu intensive) solution might be jconvolver + > > an impulse response to generate the reverb. YMMV. > > The 'sala-concerti-cdm' (the small concert hall of La > Casa della Musica) one is quite a nice reverb for use > on piano. The supplied config files (providing mutiple > inputs correspondig to different positions on stage) are > indeed overkill, and you'll need to mix the reverb with > the original signal as well. But it's easy to create a > configuration that just provides what you need and doesn't > require external mixing. Drop me a line if you need > assistance. > > CPU load for this one is irrelevant compared to what > Linuxsampler requires anyway. > +1 for jconvolver on piano. Pori is a nice hall, as is the Casa Della Musica to. I once stuck a piano in a prehistoric cave using jconvolver; that was a lot of fun (and sounded surprisingly good). If you don't want to go the whole jconv routine, the Calf reverb is pretty nice too. -ken _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user