Right on time.George wrote:I can recommend our compressors: ThrillMe and NightShine.
PLUGINS adding DEPTH/MOJO/ANALOG VIBE/ 3D-ness ? Best ones?
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- KVRAF
- 2628 posts since 30 Mar, 2007 from In and Out Burger
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Progmatic-Studios Progmatic-Studios https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=10142
- KVRist
- 92 posts since 5 Nov, 2003 from Netherlands
- KVRAF
- 10359 posts since 3 Feb, 2003 from Finland, Espoo
Acustica Audio Aqua plugins are great for this. Especially the latest Magenta EQ. It's ridiculous how much "mojo" it has. Highly recommended.
Another really good candidate is Klanghelm SDRR package. This one is very much worth reading the manual of and truly learning it's sound and capabilities. Very versatile and can go from extremely subtle to completely destroyed. It's the one I use the most for giving mojo to everything (and I own Slate VCC, all Sonimus plugins etc).
Another really good candidate is Klanghelm SDRR package. This one is very much worth reading the manual of and truly learning it's sound and capabilities. Very versatile and can go from extremely subtle to completely destroyed. It's the one I use the most for giving mojo to everything (and I own Slate VCC, all Sonimus plugins etc).
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- KVRAF
- 7397 posts since 20 Jul, 2004 from Clearwater
Satson is one of my favs.
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- KVRAF
- 16977 posts since 23 Jun, 2010 from north of London ON
bailees7irish wrote:Right on time.George wrote:I can recommend our compressors: ThrillMe and NightShine.
Barry
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- KVRian
- 605 posts since 31 Aug, 2012
How did u tried the Magenta btw?Are you a beta tester or ?I must agree with u for the SDRR but its a cpu hog a bit ! Do u still use the VCC? Slate continue to spam for the ver.2.0 update..bmanic wrote:Acustica Audio Aqua plugins are great for this. Especially the latest Magenta EQ. It's ridiculous how much "mojo" it has. Highly recommended.
Another really good candidate is Klanghelm SDRR package. This one is very much worth reading the manual of and truly learning it's sound and capabilities. Very versatile and can go from extremely subtle to completely destroyed. It's the one I use the most for giving mojo to everything (and I own Slate VCC, all Sonimus plugins etc).
- KVRAF
- 1724 posts since 31 Dec, 2004 from betwixt
Forgive my question, for now I am ignorant on the subject of coding (software/plugins). It's something I'm probably going to learn.itneveris wrote:You'll get more 3d-ness thru simple lo-pass filtering than you will with saturation plugins
But is this really all saturation simulations are? Some kind of advanced series of low pass filters? Or other filters?
I've been experimenting with FabFilter's Saturn demo. I love what it's doing to some things (basses, guitars, drums, haven't tried it on vocals yet). It's that state of, "Is this thing really doing what I think I hear it is or am I just ?"
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- KVRAF
- 8414 posts since 4 Jul, 2012 from Alesia
Fabfilter saturn is pretty good at adding nice saturation even though it's not circuit modeled or anything. Ohmforce Ohmicide might be older but it still can make stuff jump through the speakers (In a good way) on the right settings.
One thing about adding too much Mojo is that it can mess up your sound. Think of saturation like spice in food, you don't want too much and you don't want too little
I often add to much and it muddies the sound up.
One thing about adding too much Mojo is that it can mess up your sound. Think of saturation like spice in food, you don't want too much and you don't want too little
I often add to much and it muddies the sound up.
Last edited by V0RT3X on Wed Oct 29, 2014 6:22 pm, edited 3 times in total.
- KVRAF
- 4014 posts since 29 Jun, 2011 from USA
I can't say anything really gives me all that in one go, that comes from so many elements in the mix.
But the stuff that has impressed me the most with adding something special to a mix, or elements:
NI Vari-comp, Fabfilter MB (just amazing how much it can do for a mix), Brainworks Saturator 1/2, Elysia Alpha, Brainworx Vertigo, Relab LX480, RND Portico EQ, SSL X-sat.
But the stuff that has impressed me the most with adding something special to a mix, or elements:
NI Vari-comp, Fabfilter MB (just amazing how much it can do for a mix), Brainworks Saturator 1/2, Elysia Alpha, Brainworx Vertigo, Relab LX480, RND Portico EQ, SSL X-sat.
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Sound Designer - Soundsets for Pigments, Repro, Diva, Virus TI, Nord Lead 4, Serum, DUNE2, Spire, and others
Sound Designer - Soundsets for Pigments, Repro, Diva, Virus TI, Nord Lead 4, Serum, DUNE2, Spire, and others
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PurpleCatfishBettie PurpleCatfishBettie https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=211816
- KVRAF
- 3278 posts since 22 Jul, 2009
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- KVRist
- 106 posts since 22 Mar, 2011
Here's my general setup, I must stress that every stage adds very, very small amounts of mojo and are set to very low amounts of drive or alike, but has huge impact on the overall mix... and makes mixing much easier to be honest
Channels:
Slate VCC (SSL setting) - Signal starts with a nice desk emulation, very subtle but huge impact when every channel has this on.
Alloy 2 - Multiband exciter used to add emphasis and distortion to the most important parts of the sound and each band also has stereo widening, so can make each sound as wide or narrow as you want. This, along with the EQ is the main 'shaping' element for any given sound, and the most important stage other than ensuring you're working with good source material in the first place.
Bus:
Slate VCC (Trident setting) - Trident seems to add a nice sheen and wideness to the bus
N.I. Supercharger - This thing is absolutely lovely, adjust the saturation and character knobs to suit which bus it's on. Drums will love you with this on the bus. I use very low amounts of drive.
Ableton Glue Compressor - 2:1 ratio (the compression automaticall kicks in a bit earlier on this setting, so a soft knee I suppose), compressing circa 1db or so
Master:
Slate VCC (Trident setting) - As above
PSP Vintage Warmer 2 - only 1db of drive
Fab Filter Saturn - just 10% clean tape drive, anything below 100hz gets 0%
EDIT: I also sometimes use Saturn on individual channels, the tone shaper sliders are really nice ways to sculpt a sound a bit more
I find that adding little bits at multiple stages gives a good sound. Since using this as a default part of my Ableton template, mixing has become much, much easier.
On a side note, I like to slap an EQ on the master and AB my project against reference material as I go - filtering to only hear specific frequency regions rather than the whole mix - really great way to AB against other tracks I find.
Channels:
Slate VCC (SSL setting) - Signal starts with a nice desk emulation, very subtle but huge impact when every channel has this on.
Alloy 2 - Multiband exciter used to add emphasis and distortion to the most important parts of the sound and each band also has stereo widening, so can make each sound as wide or narrow as you want. This, along with the EQ is the main 'shaping' element for any given sound, and the most important stage other than ensuring you're working with good source material in the first place.
Bus:
Slate VCC (Trident setting) - Trident seems to add a nice sheen and wideness to the bus
N.I. Supercharger - This thing is absolutely lovely, adjust the saturation and character knobs to suit which bus it's on. Drums will love you with this on the bus. I use very low amounts of drive.
Ableton Glue Compressor - 2:1 ratio (the compression automaticall kicks in a bit earlier on this setting, so a soft knee I suppose), compressing circa 1db or so
Master:
Slate VCC (Trident setting) - As above
PSP Vintage Warmer 2 - only 1db of drive
Fab Filter Saturn - just 10% clean tape drive, anything below 100hz gets 0%
EDIT: I also sometimes use Saturn on individual channels, the tone shaper sliders are really nice ways to sculpt a sound a bit more
I find that adding little bits at multiple stages gives a good sound. Since using this as a default part of my Ableton template, mixing has become much, much easier.
On a side note, I like to slap an EQ on the master and AB my project against reference material as I go - filtering to only hear specific frequency regions rather than the whole mix - really great way to AB against other tracks I find.
Last edited by stevemac on Mon Oct 27, 2014 5:05 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- KVRian
- 605 posts since 31 Aug, 2012
Another one without killing ur cpu that much its the DDMF The Strip plugin its sounds superb very close to the Herritage AUdio Clone really smooth !