Clean

freqDELAY Workflow: From Subtle Width to Extreme Rhythmic Textures

Overview

freqDELAY is a time-based audio effect that applies frequency-dependent delay and filtering to create width, movement, and rhythmic modulation in a mix. It splits the signal into frequency bands, delays each band independently, and often includes filtering, feedback and modulation controls letting you sculpt spatial and temporal characteristics across the spectrum.

When to use it

  • Add stereo width without phasey-sounding chorus.
  • Move problematic low-frequency energy out of the center.
  • Create rhythmic textures or stereo movement for pads, synths, guitars, or percussion.
  • Design unique sound effects and transitions.

Signal flow / typical setup

  1. Insert freqDELAY on a return/send or directly on the track (use send for parallel processing).
  2. Adjust crossover points to define low/mid/high bands.
  3. Set independent delay times per band (short for width, longer for rhythmic repeats).
  4. Use feedback per band for resonance and repeats—keep low-band feedback minimal to avoid muddiness.
  5. Route wet signal in stereo, pan/delay-detune bands for spatial spread.
  6. Add filtering (HP/LP) per band to control tonal balance.
  7. Modulate delay time, feedback, or crossover with LFOs or envelopes for movement.

Practical settings (starting points)

  • Subtle width: Low band 0–10 ms, mid 5–25 ms, high 10–40 ms; feedback 0–10%; stereo spread 40–60%.
  • Ambient shimmer: Mid/high 80–220 ms; feedback 30–55%; high band pitch-shift or modulation.
  • Rhythmic textures: Sync mid/high to tempo (1/8–1/2 note); feedback 15–40%; band panning automated to sequence.
  • Vintage slap: All bands 50–120 ms; low feedback, high damping; add saturation.

Tips to avoid problems

  • Mono-compatibility: Check in mono and reduce stereo spread or phase for low bands.
  • Control low-end: High-pass the wet signal below ~120–200 Hz or reduce low-band wet mix.
  • Tame build-up: Use damping/low-pass in feedback loops to prevent harshness.
  • Use automation: Vary band crossover and feedback over the track to keep interest.

Creative ideas

  • Sidechain specific bands to kick for cleaner mixes.
  • Automate crossover to sweep delay emphasis through the spectrum.
  • Freeze or latch delays on a section for a stuttering breakdown.
  • Combine with reverb for huge, textured ambiences.

Quick workflow template

  1. Insert on a send; send dry signal at 10–30% to preserve clarity.
  2. Set band crossovers: low <250 Hz, mid 250–3.5 kHz, high >3.5 kHz.
  3. Short delays + low feedback for width; longer + higher feedback for rhythm/ambience.
  4. Add subtle modulation to high band for shimmer.
  5. Tweak wet/dry and check in context; adjust for mono compatibility.

If you want, I can create presets for specific instruments (vocals, guitar, pad, drums) or produce exact delay time values synced to a BPM you provide.

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