Fruity Limiter
If you want a clean, crisp sounding mix it is important to reduce the background noise from your sounds and samples. Perhaps the noise of individual sounds is hardly audible, but if you have multiple tracks the noise gets magnified, which can make your mix sound muddy.
Por eso, he escrito este libro y el letrero PROHIBIDO.
In this Fruity Love Philter tutorial, we'll demonstrate how to remove this unwanted noise.Step 1: Understanding Noise GatesNoise gates can help us to remove noise. Or rather, help us to reduce the noise. With a noise gate we are not actually removing noise from sounds.
Fruity Limiter Tutorial
Instead we're hiding the noise during quiet parts of a track. A noise gate allows sounds above a volume threshold to pass through while it blocks sounds below that threshold. Simply put, a noise gate is either open (sound passes through) or closed (sound is not allowed to pass through).See the illustration below. As long as the input signal (red line) is below the threshold (gray line), the output signal is zero (green line). But when the input signal is above the threshold, the noise gate opens and lets the sound pass through. The speed at which the noise gate opens and closes depends on attack and release settings.Now that we know how a noise gate works, let us setup a noise gate with the Fruity Love Philter, a versatile filter plugin for creating complex filtering and gating effects.Step 2: Add some noiseStart with an empty project and add an audio clip to the Step Sequencer. For example, you may want to add the FLSKick 01 sample, which you find in your FL Studio folder under DataPatchesPacksDrum Kit 01. Simply drag and drop the sample to the Step Sequencer.
See below:Program a simple pattern and listen to it. You should clearly hear the noise at the end of the sample.
This is the noise we want to hide.Step 3: Add the Fruity LimiterThe Fruity Love Philter has no visual feedback, but there is another plugin we can use for that purpose. The Fruity Limiter.