
Originally Posted by
danielmarshall
Yes. Instead of using groups clone the kicks and set them as children of a common layer. Route the one kick to the side chain channel (where you send your bass as well, but panned to the other side), and the other to its own channel for further processing such as EQ or reverb panned to however you normally pan your kick (should usually be dead center)
You could also accoumplish this using a little mixer routing. This is actually preferable because you can then route your bass to two separate side chain compressors for either stereo channel (using the same C1 settings of course!) and feed them with the same key, preserving their stereo field. Basslines without any stereo width (at least those which have some higher harmonics in them) sound a little lifeless to me, so this is a big bonus if you like techstep style DnB basslines in your music.
If you don't have Waves C1 or something similar, but still want to do side chaining - have no fear! There's a very powerful technique to get a similar sound (and have even more control!) using a two lovely little FLStudio plugins called Peak Controller and Formula Controller. Basically what you do is to put a Peak controller in a mixer channel, then route your kick to that channel. Make sure the mute setting is off (it's on by default). Next send your bass to a new mixer channel and insert a formula controller into it. Then right click on the knob that says "a". Select "Link to controller". Then Select "Peak ctr (*whateve your kick's channel's name is*) - Peak" under "internal controllers" and click OK. Now type in (a*(2*b-1))+c into the formula box. Set c to somewhere in the middle, and b to Roughly 25%. Finally right click on your bass channel's mixer gain and select "link to controller" again. This time link it to your formula controller.
Hit spacebar and whatch your bassline's gain duck to the kick! To tweak the settings (which you will need to do almost always) you can play with the decay settings on the Peak controller to increase or decrease the duration of the gain reduction as well as smoothing out ergular gating. You can further affect the shape of the gain reduction curve by playing with the tension control. This is useful for taloring the agression of the side chaining action. Next you'll want to play with the more obvious sounding parameters - namely the b and c knobs on your formula controller. b directly affects the degree of gain reduction (or possibly expansion if you push it past 50%!) and c controls the overall maximum volume of the track.
If somebody will give me some web space I'll upload an example FLP file.