You're preferred method for adding analog warmth
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- KVRian
- 1045 posts since 23 Jul, 2001 from Jersey Is Where America's At
I've been playing with using multiple instances of the Kjaerhus GCO-1 at some extreme settings, not so much for analog warmth in itself, but for a nice analog like drive with extreme compression. Blockfish actually isn't too bad at the job either and will sometimes make it into the chain. And saturated driver is another one that gets used.
Why have I been playing with this? I was just reading an interview with Rob Schnieder (Elephant 6 producer) where he said the reason Neutral Milk Hotel's "In The Aeroplane Over the Sea" sounds the way it does is because they were overdriving the pre's, and the compressors, and just chaining this stuff backwards and forwards to get everything nice and fuzzy without having to resort to distortion pedals and such, and I love the way that record sounds. You'd be surprised how close a vibe you can get to that which just a few instances of GCO-1.
Why have I been playing with this? I was just reading an interview with Rob Schnieder (Elephant 6 producer) where he said the reason Neutral Milk Hotel's "In The Aeroplane Over the Sea" sounds the way it does is because they were overdriving the pre's, and the compressors, and just chaining this stuff backwards and forwards to get everything nice and fuzzy without having to resort to distortion pedals and such, and I love the way that record sounds. You'd be surprised how close a vibe you can get to that which just a few instances of GCO-1.
I'm sorry this post wasn't about techno.
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- KVRist
- 222 posts since 29 Feb, 2004 from Earth (sometimes...)
Creamware's "Softclip" plugin, it provides the classical tube saturation (not distortion!) that works very well.
I use it after every native VSTi.
Obviously U must have the Creamware Scope system...
Othervise the only other valid (for me) choice is the bounce trought an external tube preamp, tube EQ or wheels analog tape set to minimal/neutral action.
I find any other average native solution not so convincing.
TC, UAD and maybe (near the limit!) PSP are also good.
But UAD and PSP are also dynamic compressors, that could be sometimes a tiresome thing...
I use it after every native VSTi.
Obviously U must have the Creamware Scope system...
Othervise the only other valid (for me) choice is the bounce trought an external tube preamp, tube EQ or wheels analog tape set to minimal/neutral action.
I find any other average native solution not so convincing.
TC, UAD and maybe (near the limit!) PSP are also good.
But UAD and PSP are also dynamic compressors, that could be sometimes a tiresome thing...
Less is more!
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- KVRian
- 1178 posts since 24 Jan, 2003 from the hilly bit in Lincs, UK
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Stupid American Pig Stupid American Pig https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=4753
- KVRAF
- 7065 posts since 25 Nov, 2002 from not sure
Im not sure there is much to it really. The voxengo analog flux suite has several plugins that can assist with that. I believe the "Tape Bus" and "Insert" use convolution of real hardware. If you just have any convolution processor, you would just load up an impulse and yer on yer way.Exit Zero wrote:No specifics on using convolution to do this? Anybody done this?
Convolution is not necessarily the only way to go. There are many plugins that can warm up yer recordings out there. What do you currently own? mebbe we can help you use what you already have. Some very good ones have been mentioned already.
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- KVRian
- 565 posts since 16 Dec, 2002 from Pittsburgh, PA
Those are my 2 favorites. Specifically the Tape Saturation distortion with Trash. On the non-software side, I am going to experiment with recording to video tape.Stupid American Pig wrote:and I prefer
Izotope Ozone 3
Izotope Trash
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- KVRian
- 576 posts since 30 Jan, 2004 from Baja Texas
I have some Crakz of some of Meffy's older stuff, and I have to admit. 
RogerPerrin
I'm up to my old hat tricks again.
I'm up to my old hat tricks again.
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- TopModernGeezer
- 2679 posts since 14 Mar, 2001 from Stuttgart, Germany
- KVRAF
- 6478 posts since 16 Dec, 2002
I suppose this would be a great place to hint that I'm actually developing a plugin just for these "warmth" purposes.
It's called 'RetroBand' and it does the thing with a new method. It doesn't sound automatically stuffy, muffled and farty like many people are used to when hearing "tube emulations" and similar things. I created it because to be honest, the state of digital warmth has found me wanting.
It doesn't actually model any particular piece of analog gear, but more like several aspects of the general equation of warmth. I call what it does 'signal intermodulation', because all new plugins need a nice enigmatic buzzword to go with them.
Look for annoucements within the next few months. I still have to sort out things like (simplistic and unintrusive) copy protection and payment. Oh and a few bugs, too.
In the meantime there's warmifier, hydratone, crunchessor, tapebus, AIPL tonewarm (old, but still valid DX plug). To name a few.
It's called 'RetroBand' and it does the thing with a new method. It doesn't sound automatically stuffy, muffled and farty like many people are used to when hearing "tube emulations" and similar things. I created it because to be honest, the state of digital warmth has found me wanting.
It doesn't actually model any particular piece of analog gear, but more like several aspects of the general equation of warmth. I call what it does 'signal intermodulation', because all new plugins need a nice enigmatic buzzword to go with them.
Look for annoucements within the next few months. I still have to sort out things like (simplistic and unintrusive) copy protection and payment. Oh and a few bugs, too.
In the meantime there's warmifier, hydratone, crunchessor, tapebus, AIPL tonewarm (old, but still valid DX plug). To name a few.
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- KVRAF
- 6490 posts since 14 Jun, 2004 from Rochester, NY
i like to use voxengo tubeamp that free one to warm signals up
it works wonderfully if you dont max it out 
RonC
RonC
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- KVRian
- 1128 posts since 3 Aug, 2004
i heard waves q-clone can be pretty helpful (esp. the neve preset(s)) there are additional presets to be downloaded here:
http://www.waves.com/content.asp?id=1583
Three new preset libraries consisting of more than 200 precision EQ settings of well-known brand analog equalizers:
EQ4: 146 presets (3 mb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ4.zip
EQ5: 26 presets (693 kb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ5.zip
EQ6: 52 presets (1 mb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ6.zip
http://www.waves.com/content.asp?id=1583
Three new preset libraries consisting of more than 200 precision EQ settings of well-known brand analog equalizers:
EQ4: 146 presets (3 mb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ4.zip
EQ5: 26 presets (693 kb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ5.zip
EQ6: 52 presets (1 mb)
http://www.waves.com/objects/zip/EQ6.zip
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- KVRian
- 665 posts since 7 Jan, 2003 from somewhere between 50 and 60Hz
can't wait for ColorTone Pro (PC version) when it eventually comes... ColorTone Free is a little too subtle for me
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- TopModernGeezer
- 2679 posts since 14 Mar, 2001 from Stuttgart, Germany

