help!
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- Banned
- 6127 posts since 1 Apr, 2004 from Et in Arcadia Ego
Shamann's the long wonded one, ask him..
The short answer is it's delay based on a tape reel, and imperfections in the tape drive can introduce all sorts of cool side-effects. If you want to see a pretty good VST equivelant, check out arcDev's Dubb Box, and be sure to read the manual, as it explains the functions pretty well.
ciao,
D
The short answer is it's delay based on a tape reel, and imperfections in the tape drive can introduce all sorts of cool side-effects. If you want to see a pretty good VST equivelant, check out arcDev's Dubb Box, and be sure to read the manual, as it explains the functions pretty well.
ciao,
D
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- Banned
- 6127 posts since 1 Apr, 2004 from Et in Arcadia Ego
Also, if you want to learn from the source, do a google search on the Roland Space Echo, arguably the best tape echo ever made.
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- KVRian
- 769 posts since 2 Apr, 2005
The main feature about tape was that the sound lost it's high frequencies each time the tape loop went around, which actually sounds very cool. There are other small imperfections, such as wow & flutter (caused by subtle speed variations) and a generally fuzziness (caused by the loop of tape deteriorating). In my taste, I don't like too much of these imperfections. But I do like the sound of some slow modulation. My ideal "tape" delay rolls off the highs and the lows with each feedback, so the sound gets more band-passed as it decays. Strictly, that's caused by eq and not really intrinsic to a tape delay. But tape has a warmth and some compression that needs to be modeled with some saturation and/or compression to sound convincing in a plugin. I like the kjaerhus classic delay - it does digital, tape and analog in the same plugin. Don't confuse analog with tape - in many ways I prefer it. This refers to the analog "bucket-brigade" IC's that were used in pre-digital days. The consisted of thousands of FET transistors and capacitors on a single chip, and the sound was passed from each stage just like the bucket-brigade fire fighting method. They were very noisy, and the sound degraded very badly, which is why they sounded so cool. In real life, delays off building and mountains etc get very fuzzy. A digital delay is too perfect, but sometimes that's a great effect too.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 1891 posts since 9 Oct, 2004 from Columbus,Ohio
What VST emulations are out there of a tape delay?
"You are going to let the fear of poverty govern your life and your reward will be that you will eat, but you will not live."
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- KVRian
- 1394 posts since 28 Mar, 2002 from Austria
I think, the best one is bundled in Voxengo's AnalogFluxSuite.J_Starner wrote:What VST emulations are out there of a tape delay?
