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Softube Passive-Active Pack

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Swedish software designers Softube made their mark a couple of years ago with Vintage Amp Room, a guitar amp modelling plug-in. Since then, it’s applied its DSP mastery to various designs, including the Abbey Road Brilliance Pack.

The Passive-Active Pack continues on the EQ tip, containing three plug-ins, each with a specific angle. One is based on active circuitry (modelled on the Filtek Labo Mk5 desk EQ) and one on a passive design (modelled on the Neumann PEV 930 desk EQ). The third, Focusing Equalizer, combines both circuitry types in a variable frequency design.

Overview

It may seem a little odd releasing a three-plug-in bundle when you could simply combine all options in one interface. Softube is upfront about this, saying that it aimed to recreate not just the sound but also the simplicity of classic analogue designs.

This certainly applies to the Passive and Active Equalizers. The former is the simplest, with three bands: low shelf, high shelf and mid-range presence. The two shelves are fixed (60Hz and 10kHz) and the mid-range offers seven fixed frequencies (700Hz to 5.6kHz). Both shelves have stepped 3dB cut and boost, with the presence boost only in 2dB gradations.

“Softube says that it aimed to recreate not just the sound but also the simplicity of classic analogue designs.”

The Active Equalizer is more flexible, offering three slightly overlapping parametric bands and high- and low-cut filters (18dB/octave). Once again, the controls adjust the gain in steps (2dB this time), with up to 16dB boost or cut. To round things off, each parametric band has two Q settings: sharp and wide.

The Focusing Equalizer is more complex and can operate in either passive or active mode (based on the same modelled units). However, the three bands work differently. The upper and lower shelving bands are boost-only, with cut or boost for the mid-range. These work in conjunction with the high- and low-cut filters, and moving the cutoff points of these actually affects the EQ frequencies of the three bands. The plug-in is rounded off with a three-flavour variable saturation control.

In use

The Passive EQ has a real point-and-shoot simplicity to it. We found this particularly effective on acoustic guitar, with boosts on the low and high bands scooping out the mids. In typical passive style, you’ll also find that there’s interplay between the bands, and a sharpening Q on the presence band as you reach maximum boost.

Softube passive eq

Obviously, it’s no good for surgical tasks, but it’s a great choice for sweetening your masters or making broad tonal changes.

The Active EQ sounds completely different, emphasising the difference in the underlying (virtual) circuits. The dual Q options per band enable much more accurate EQing, and with 16dB to play with, we were easily able to completely reshape some test drum loops. The narrow Q option gives particularly sharp results and is great for adding punch to lifeless kicks and snares.

Softube active eq

This plug-in temporarily indicates currently selected values above the meters – something that the Passive EQ doesn’t do. Finally, you’ll find that if you boost like frequencies using two different bands, you won’t get a crazy doubling up of gain, and this helps keep overloads at bay.

With the same underlying passive and active algorithms as the other plug-ins, the Focusing Equalizer’s point of interest has to be its variable frequency system. Softube advises you to use the high/low-cut filter sliders to set upper and lower limits for your sound, and this in turn dictates where the EQ bands operate – as you narrow the range, the low/mid/high bands move to target that area.

The sound of the cut filters also follows the global active/passive setting, with the passive ones being much gentler (6dB/octave) than those of the active mode. The ‘sliding’ display (which looks just like an old-school radio tuner) depicts only the cutoff frequencies here – there are no other frequency indicators, and with no markings on the controls and no feedback above the meters, you really have to rely on your ears. Indeed, to further investigate, we even loaded up a frequency analyser.

Softube focusing eq

In practice, however, we found it best to treat these units like old-school hardware, tweaking until the sound is good, rather than obsessing over frequency values. Used in this way, the Focusing EQ offers all the flavour of the other two plug-ins, with greater flexibility.

Its saturation effect is also a winner, with the Keep Low and Keep High settings helping you avoid damage to low and high frequencies. It’s only a shame that there’s no saturation bypass switch, for easy A/B comparison.

Overall, the Passive-Active Pack is a great piece of work from Softube, designed with vision but also with full regard for the sound of some pretty rare kit. What’s more, the price tag is considerably more modest than comparable top-flight analogue emulations.

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



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Softube Passive-Active Pack

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How to make it in music

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

What’s your dream job? Wannabe a professional producer, remixer, composer? Picture yourself as an underground hero crafting your own tunes at your leisure, or aspire to man the controls in a top-flight studio?

If you’ve got your sights set on a career in music production – whether it be full-time, casual or something in between – we’d highly recommend you pick up our brand-new Computer Music Special: How To Make It In Music. Written by industry experts, it uncovers everything you need to know to get on track for success in 2010.

Discover how to:

• Get your tracks heard

• Promote your act

• Build a fanbase

• Make money

• Make the leap from bedroom to pro producer

• Be your own manager

And if it’s a full-time gig you’re after, this is your chance to get insider advice from pros in the most coveted careers in the business. We’ve assembled a lineup of producers, tunesmiths, performers and tech-heads who share their insights on the skills you need, and reveal how you could get that break you’ve been seeking.

Computer Music Special 40: How to Make It in Music

Onsale dates*:

UK – available now!

Europe – from 17 Feb

North America – 10 March

ROW – 24 March

*Overseas dates are approximate due to factors beyond our control.

Computer Music Specials are available from selected WH Smith, Barnes & Noble, Chapters and independent newsagents.

Questions? Problems? Contact us at computermusic.specials@futurenet.com

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How to make it in music

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Livid Instruments Block

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

The grid-based controller field has got crowded: monome, Akai’s APC40, Novation’s Launchpad… these controllers target Ableton Live users, directly or indirectly, as well as users of more flexible applications such as Max/MSP and Reaktor, and various VJ programs. Add Max for Live to that list, and ideas are rapidly changing about what connections we can build between hardware and software.

The most recent arrival on the scene is the Block. This is the latest in a line of controllers from Livid Instruments in Texas, going back to the Tactic, the VX Rack, and the Ohm (still in production as the Ohm64), and sidetracking into the transparent plastic weird-cool of the Viditar – a video jamming ‘guitar’.

In detail

More streamlined than the Ohm, Block is a square device which is all about the 64 buttons (all of which are lit by blue LEDs). There’s just a handful of other controls: eight knobs, two faders, and seven function buttons (one is a big fat one intended for more dynamic uses like tap tempo).

The top panel is aluminium, and the case is made of jelutong, a lightweight hardwood that used to be a major source of chewing gum, apparently.

Livid instruments block

The Block scores with its wood and metal loveliness and chunky controls, but we’d prefer the 13 screws in the top panel to be countersunk, especially the ones between the buttons – as things stand, they are intrusive. Also, the knobs don’t line up with the grid – as a performer you may find this annoying in a live situation. The device is compact enough, but it is quite deep, and it won’t fit in everybody’s laptop case.

“Block is a square device which is all about the 64 buttons (all of which are lit by blue LEDs). There’s just a handful of other controls: eight knobs, two faders, and seven function buttons.”

Block is USB-powered, doesn’t need drivers, and ships with MIDI notes and CCs assigned to the controls and buttons. Use it immediately and figure it out later – we like that.

When you’re ready to create your own presets, download the free Block Editor app, assign your chosen functions (the ‘function’ buttons can also send program changes, by the way), and toy with the LEDs. Draw a pattern in the Editor and Block’s LEDs follow right along – type a text message, and you can watch it scroll across the display.

Even better, load a QuickTime movie into the Editor and watch as the pads attempt to display it – this works best with simple graphics. It’s probably pointless, but a lot of fun.

The Editor source code is available under a GPL licence, and can be edited in Max/MSP.

(2 pages; go to page: 2)

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Livid Instruments Block

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Akai APC20 Ableton Controller: Get Half an APC40, or an APC and a Half

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

apc20

Ableton Live-specific controllers just got another addition. You probably could have guessed this would come out, following the APC40 and Novation’s grid-only Launchpad last year, but the Akai APC20 is the new, smaller sibling to Akai’s APC40. The APC20 does basically everything the APC40 does on the latter’s left-hand side — it’s a grid of buttons, a set of mixers for your tracks, buttons for activating tracks (and solo/cue/record), and shortcuts for moving around and triggering the transport. Using the buttons, you can trigger clips or notes, with additional buttons for scenes and stopping clips around the outside of the 8

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Liquidsonics updates Reverberate to v1.222

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

5th November 2009: Liquidsonics has updated Reverberate to v1.222. Changes since v1.220: All: Controls now default to sliders mode and have increased precision (in addition to ability to hold shift for even higher pr…

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Liquidsonics updates Reverberate to v1.222

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Blue Cat Audio updates Blue Cat’s Remote Control to v2.2

Monday, October 5th, 2009

5th October 2009: Blue Cat Audio has updated its virtual control surface plug-in, Blue Cat’s Remote Control, to v2.2. The new version introduces the ability to customize the names of the controls of the interface witho…

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Blue Cat Audio updates Blue Cat’s Remote Control to v2.2

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ceeFrenzy For iPhone Provides Pocket Vinyl Price Guide

Friday, August 21st, 2009

ceefrenzy

Out of date vinyl price guides are no match for the constantly fluctuating prices of hot items. The iPhone app ceeFrenzy attempts to take some of the guess work out assessing the currently value of vinyl by gathering data from completed E-Bay sales.

Of course, E-Bay prices are certainly not an ideal measure of total value, but having an idea of what price a record could fetch can definitely come in handy in a number of situations.

ceeFrenzy costs $1.99

Visit Collectors Frenzy or iTunes for more info.

[Thanks Redef!]

Related posts:

  1. iSample App Offers Quick iPhone Recording & Looping
  2. Tonetable For iPhone Controls Serato, Traktor, and More
  3. MixMeister Scratch Now Available For iPhone & iPod

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ceeFrenzy For iPhone Provides Pocket Vinyl Price Guide

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