User Manual

Table Of Contents
WAVELAB
Plug-in Processor Reference 33 – 779
NaturalVerb
NaturalVerb is a high-quality reverb that adds ambience, or room-quality,
to the sound. In addition to the standard size and decay parameters, Na-
turalVerb also features low- and high-pass filters, plus a gate for gated re-
verb effects.
To change the parameters, either drag the sliders up and down, or click in
a slider area to set the slider. If you hold down [Shift], you can change the
parameters with a higher degree of precision. If you hold down [Ctrl] and
click in a slider area, the slider is reset to its default value.
If you click on the logo a diagram of the signal-chain is shown. The follow-
ing parameters are available:
Parameter Description
Pre-Delay This governs the start time of the first “early reflection”, i.e. how the
sound is “bounced” off the walls in the simulated room environment. The
value range is 0-100 milliseconds. The lower the value, the sooner the
early reflection is heard.
HPF This is a high-pass filter that only affects the reverb signal into the Natu-
ralVerb, not the original audio signal. A high-pass filter lets high-fre-
quency signals through while cutting off low-frequency signals. The
slider allows you to set the frequency for the filter, and only sounds
above the set frequency will be heard.
LPF This is a low-pass filter that only affects the reverb signal into the Natu-
ralVerb, not the original audio signal. A low-pass filter lets low-fre-
quency signals through while cutting off high-frequency signals. The
slider allows you to set the frequency for the filter, and only sounds be-
low the set frequency will be heard.
Room Size This regulates the size of the simulated room, and thereby the spacious-
ness of the reverb. The value range is 1-30, and the higher the value you
specify, the bigger the room.
Decay This lets you specify the length of the reverberation. The value range
goes from 26 milliseconds to 11.63 seconds.
Damping Damping can be used for attenuating the high frequencies of the reverb,
thereby creating a softer, warmer sound. The higher the value, the more
the high frequencies will be attenuated.