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HydraTone

Reviewed By SongMonkey [all]
February 6th, 2006
Version reviewed: 1.1 on Windows

Simple test. Put Hydratone on any track. Boost at the frequencies of choice (let's leave aside boost/cut issues for the moment). Play with the "Fire" knob. Play with the Phase knob. Bring down the volume so you can engage it without a noticable increase in overall volume. Now bring in any other software eq you have, at any price, make the same boosts, adjust the level...and A/B them.

I think you'll be shocked at how flat even your most expensive software eq will sound in comparison. I was, for damn sure. It's that obvious. I've never had an eq that brought such a 3D sound to my tracks. The difference is night and day.

Drawbacks: Plenty of 'em. CPU hog. You have to install Pluggo runtime for it to work. The eq curve display is only roughly accurate, and more distracting than anything else. The action is anything but smooth.

But I'd go through a MUCH darker hell to get that SOUND. This is not a surgical eq, nor is it clean. It's all color, all mojo. You can choose any of four hardware eq models with each band, but the Fire and Phase controls really put it head and shoulders above any other colored eq. Being able to adjust the phase of each track while the mix is in full swing will bring amazing results. It continually surprises me how much easier it is now to get certain tracks to sit into the mix.

This is a great tool. If you think your tracks need an injection of life and vibe, you would be doing yourself a disservice not give this eq a serious look. Highly recommended.
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Compadre

Reviewed By SongMonkey [all]
November 3rd, 2005
Version reviewed: 1.1 on Windows

This is the second rewrite of my first Compadre review, to keep up with the latest version, now at 1.1.

For a basis of comparison, I often use the UAD-1 plugs, and I like UA's emulations of the LA2, the 1176, and I also really like Waves' SSLs. Each of these are of high quality, and though I wouldn't give them up, I find Beatpuncher occupies its own niche and gives me sonic options that the others simply can't provide.

Compadre can function as a typical compressor (though the "snap" and "non-linearity" controls let you control the personality of the sound in useful ways), but the really unique trick of this comp is what happens when you put it into "shaper" mode. This accesses a variety of user-chosen amplitude curves that act independently of the actual peaks in the program material, with fascinating and fantastic results.

The interface is beautiful and well-designed, as with all of Otium's products, but you have to have a light touch. The threshold is critically important in "shaper" mode, as are the attack and release times, and you have to be careful with your mouse while setting it. On the other hand, when you hit a fortunate combination on a drumloop, you can get mindblowing, very groovy and musical results. Sometimes, working with material that has a lot of "air" around it, Compadre can give you a "fluffy" sound that I've not heard from any software compressor. Pretty unique.

This comp has a filter sidechain that enables me to radically alter the frequencies to which the compressor is reacting. VERY useful. The afore-mentioned "snap" and "non-linearity" function allow you to control the tone in innovative ways. Lots of options for tone creation here.

There's a secondary "auto" compressor as well as a limiter, both optional, as the audio heads out of the signal path. These offer additional tone creation tools, as well as further methods for crushing the snot out something. You can control the amount of compression of course, but also the mix of dry to wet signal, if you want to save the CPU cycles of sending your drums out to another buss and compressing that.

I've worked with drum loops in "shaper" mode and in short order had them twisted into funky, totally usable, totally unrecognizable rhythmic elements. They really sounded as if I'd spent ages slicing hits and reversing them; the way this compressor lets go of the beat sometimes gives you the most luscious "whooosh" of air you could imagine. Really, it's ability to squeeze air out of the most unpromising of loops is what made me such a rabid fan so quickly. Again, in "shaper" mode the threshold is vital and has to be set with some sensitivity, and the release and attack times change the results quite dramatically, so it may take some a moment to find something you like, but you should hear its potential right away, and once you hit a good combination, the sounds are surprising and cool.

The 1.1 update actually provides a vital improvement -- the ability to absolutely clamp down on the signal within the first fraction of a millisecond. The first version let a little bit of the sound escape, which would sometimes result in clicks or other artifacs, making extreme shaping settings less useful. This negative effect is now gone, I'm happy to report, and the coding is tight and the plug is now CPU-optimized.

It's not for everything, but what compressor is? Its rhythmic tricks simply can't be replicated by other compressors. It's rare to find a compressor with such personality, in plugin or hardware form.

For 49 bucks? Come on. It's a steal.
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