How to Use the Haas Effect for Greater Stereo Effects in Your Audio Mixes Let's explore and understand what this effect does and what it sounds like using an electric guitar track as a sample. Please feel free to click here to quickly DL a zip file of all audio samples used in this post. What it Does: Adds a sense of depth and stereo width to your mix. The Haas Effect is most commonly used to add a sense of depth and stereo quality to a mix. It is also used often times in place of double tracking or when someone wants to fill out a mix without using a standard delay or reverb. What it Does: Adds a sense of depth and stereo width to your mix. The Haas Effect is most commonly used on guitars (but works on other sources, too). The way it works is you pan an original track hard left, for example, and then sequence up a delayed version of the track panned hard right. The delay time must be between 1-35ms for the trick to work . Her...
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