I find there are several ways to do this. This is a very controlled method. If your drummer is good and your mics are set right a lot of times you don't have to do this. Sometimes the gate itself works. However if you have a lot of ghost notes sometimes this works great.
Thanks for a great video! This function is great, and you are right, very few use it. I myself forgot about it, even though I did learn it long time ago.
@@TimTalksAudioAwesome! I never head about this bussing feature before. Definitely going to buy and stop doin tab paste, etc. Sounds like this also means you can use a DAW fader to mix/blend the Trigger sample, vs doing it from the Trigger plugin, which is a plus as well Thanks!
They can help, but you can also combine the suppression option and the filters. The suppression will “remove the bleed” from the detector circuit while the filters will help refine the source sound to get the trigger just right.
Cool video! I'm using this myself and it works fine! But when I do like you've showed us in this video and I simultaneously want to trigger both kick, snare and toms the suppress-feature seems to go nuts? Do you have any idea how I should to do? I want to trigger snare, kick and toms at the same time and I don't want it to trigger the bleed.. I'm using Cubase 10. Thanks for a great video
I find there are several ways to do this. This is a very controlled method. If your drummer is good and your mics are set right a lot of times you don't have to do this. Sometimes the gate itself works. However if you have a lot of ghost notes sometimes this works great.
Great tip!
Thank you for this!
Awesome!
This is fantastic thanks so much!
You're very welcome!
Thanks for a great video! This function is great, and you are right, very few use it. I myself forgot about it, even though I did learn it long time ago.
brilliant
This seems really cool but I don't get why it's better than just using the gate in trigger to gate the bleed...?
How does Trigger know that the right side send input is what you want suppressed vs the left?
It's built into the coding of Trigger!
@@TimTalksAudioAwesome! I never head about this bussing feature before. Definitely going to buy and stop doin tab paste, etc. Sounds like this also means you can use a DAW fader to mix/blend the Trigger sample, vs doing it from the Trigger plugin, which is a plus as well Thanks!
Do the filters in Trigger not take care of this issue?
They can help, but you can also combine the suppression option and the filters. The suppression will “remove the bleed” from the detector circuit while the filters will help refine the source sound to get the trigger just right.
Cool video! I'm using this myself and it works fine! But when I do like you've showed us in this video and I simultaneously want to trigger both kick, snare and toms the suppress-feature seems to go nuts? Do you have any idea how I should to do? I want to trigger snare, kick and toms at the same time and I don't want it to trigger the bleed.. I'm using Cubase 10. Thanks for a great video