> For Vocals, the reverb is distracting and stops me from concentrating on 
> micromanaging my voice (which is not great to start with and could use 
> all the help it can get).

It probably also thickens the timbre of your voice as an appropiate room 
acoustics would do, wouldn't it?

>For particularly challenging material a double 
> Scotch helps too, reinforcing the distracting aspect of the reverb.

Haha.

> For my instrument parts reverb or echo multiplies the tiniest of 
> mistakes and therefore I concentrate a lot harder on not making them, 
> leaving the actual playing to motor memory. My motor memory plays a lot 
> better than my conscious process.

Tuning time domain effects to the tempo of the song has a huge impact for me 
too. It really reinforces the rhythm for me (I've agreed on this with many 
friends).

I plass the bass guitar, and my instrument is quite crappy, but I always peak 
compress it, even for studying. A long attack time (circa 100ms) and a somewhat 
longer release (circa 250ms) lets the onset of the plucking go through 
(saturating my speaker just a little bit) before compressing the whole thing, 
making the sound thicker. If I need to go for a fast part, I lower the release 
time a bit.
I feel I improved my playing a lot since I started doing this. It also helps 
when playing with drummers who play loud.

A side effect on this is that your ears and brain get tired quicker of the 
drowning bass sound.



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