Nope, just the clean sound.izonin wrote:These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
Cytomic 'The Glue' Compressor
-
- KVRian
- 806 posts since 21 Sep, 2008
-
- KVRian
- 676 posts since 24 May, 2011 from los angeles
I think he means at the higher frequencies the harmonics seem to be lower on the higher harmonics but wouldn't that help give it a smoother sound?meloco_go wrote:Nope, just the clean sound.izonin wrote:These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
-
- KVRist
- 380 posts since 30 Aug, 2001 from Pyrlandia
how would these pictures relate to any frequency muffling? please note that the input was fed with a sine waveform, in other words only the huge peak around 1 kHz is original signal, all other frequency content represents harmonic artefacts, aliasing in red colour for viewers convenience.izonin wrote:andy_cytomic wrote: These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
also. Duende apparently tries to emulate non-linearities of analogue hardware, how faithfully is a different question. The Glue, as stated by Andy a number of times, doesn't do that at all, emulating only gain reduction behaviour of hardware. ie. you cannot overdrive it no matter how hard you try (unless you have softclip activated)
"Dont mistake your inability to understand how this happens for it actualy being imposible. " - nollock
-
- KVRian
- 1355 posts since 27 Oct, 2009
Well, the harmonic artifacts are present in all examples. If you listen to the Glue vs. Analog comparison on the Cytomic site, you can clearly hear how the hi-hat and ride sound more open going through the hardware (maybe that's the side effect that wasn't modeled).michu wrote:izonin wrote:how would these pictures relate to any frequency muffling? please note that the input was fed with a sine waveform, in other words only the huge peak around 1 kHz is original signal, all other frequency content represents harmonic artefacts, aliasing in red colour for viewers convenience.andy_cytomic wrote: These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
also. Duende apparently tries to emulate non-linearities of analogue hardware, how faithfully is a different question. The Glue, as stated by Andy a number of times, doesn't do that at all, emulating only gain reduction behaviour of hardware. ie. you cannot overdrive it no matter how hard you try (unless you have softclip activated)
-
- KVRian
- 806 posts since 21 Sep, 2008
Yes, but it doesn't mean any attenuation of top-end. By that logic the ultra-clean device shouldn't be able to resproduce any top-end at alljam92189 wrote:I think he means at the higher frequencies the harmonics seem to be lower on the higher harmonics but wouldn't that help give it a smoother sound?meloco_go wrote:Nope, just the clean sound.izonin wrote:These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
-
- KVRAF
- 4265 posts since 21 Oct, 2001 from my bolthole in the south pacific
@ michu
Look at the slope across the top of the (green) harmonics - on some of the examples it is more or less linear downhill slope all the way to the right hand edge of the graph. On the graph for The Glue, there is a pronounced rolloff toward the right hand edge. The upper partials are comparitively suppressed - hence less top end. This is certainly less top end on the harmonic distortion BUT the process (Andy will know what it is) which results in this roll off in top end of the harmonic distortion could easily also be applying to the wet (post-compression) full bandwidth source material (eg hi hats) so that highs in the compressed source material are suppressed (as well as higher partials of the harmonic distortion).
Look at the slope across the top of the (green) harmonics - on some of the examples it is more or less linear downhill slope all the way to the right hand edge of the graph. On the graph for The Glue, there is a pronounced rolloff toward the right hand edge. The upper partials are comparitively suppressed - hence less top end. This is certainly less top end on the harmonic distortion BUT the process (Andy will know what it is) which results in this roll off in top end of the harmonic distortion could easily also be applying to the wet (post-compression) full bandwidth source material (eg hi hats) so that highs in the compressed source material are suppressed (as well as higher partials of the harmonic distortion).
Last edited by egbert on Sat Jun 23, 2012 4:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- KVRAF
- 1865 posts since 18 Feb, 2012
None of the itb compressor is yet perfect, but The Glue is definately the one which is the closest to it's original counterpart. And even if there is some lose of high end, it's nothing that can't be fixed with fine eq after it.
- KVRAF
- 2960 posts since 9 Dec, 2011 from falling
Loss of high end with the Glue? For dogs and bats?HcDoom wrote:None of the itb compressor is yet perfect, but The Glue is definately the one which is the closest to it's original counterpart. And even if there is some lose of high end, it's nothing that can't be fixed with fine eq after it.
I see this loss of high end mentioned a few times. Are people really interpreting the graphs correctly?
- KVRAF
- 7791 posts since 20 Jul, 2004 from Clearwater
There is no loss of hi end with The Glue. It sounds like there is with the new PSP BussPressor though.
Wavsen.com - Professional mix delivery platform with client approval, watermarking, and portfolio page builder.
-
- KVRian
- 806 posts since 21 Sep, 2008
Wrong assumption.egbert wrote:The upper partials are comparitively suppressed - hence less top end.
Maybe, just not enogh to say "hence". The rolloff of higher harmonics might be just because the nonlinearity is a bit smoother.This is certainly less top end on the harmonic distortion BUT the process (Andy will know what it is) which results in this roll off in top end of the harmonic distortion could easily also be applying to the wet (post-compression) full bandwidth source material (eg hi hats) so that highs in the compressed source material are suppressed (as well as higher partials of the harmonic distortion).
-
Funkybot's Evil Twin Funkybot's Evil Twin https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=116627
- KVRAF
- 12446 posts since 16 Aug, 2006
Load up The Glue in Christian Budde's VST Plugin Analyzer then start playing around with the frequency response analysis: The Glue remains flat no matter what you throw at it. Not sure where all this talk of a loss of high end suddenly started, but there's a measurable difference between being flat, having a loss of high end, and having a hyped top end IMO.meloco_go wrote:Wrong assumption.egbert wrote:The upper partials are comparitively suppressed - hence less top end.
-
- KVRian
- 1355 posts since 27 Oct, 2009
I got the impression that there is loss in the high frequencies, listening to the comparisons with the hardware on the Cytomic's site. Probably the analog compressor enhances/vitalizes the high end.Funkybot's Evil Twin wrote:Load up The Glue in Christian Budde's VST Plugin Analyzer then start playing around with the frequency response analysis: The Glue remains flat no matter what you throw at it. Not sure where all this talk of a loss of high end suddenly started, but there's a measurable difference between being flat, having a loss of high end, and having a hyped top end IMO.meloco_go wrote:Wrong assumption.egbert wrote:The upper partials are comparitively suppressed - hence less top end.
-
- KVRAF
- 4265 posts since 21 Oct, 2001 from my bolthole in the south pacific
Read the quote from andy_cytomic - the developer of The Glue. What do you think he is saying when he says:
I am not pushing my own thesis, I am trying to follow his - my guess is that he knows what he is talking about.These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
-
- KVRian
- 1355 posts since 27 Oct, 2009
No, that was my interpretation of the images. SPAN shows no suppression of the high frequencies. But the hi-hats still don't sound as open/transparent as on the hardware examples.egbert wrote:Read the quote from andy_cytomic - the developer of The Glue. What do you think he is saying when he says:
I am not pushing my own thesis, I am trying to follow his - my guess is that he knows what he is talking about.These pictures explain the clean sound, but also the slightly muffled high frequencies. Hi-hats and rides lose some of the openness when "glued".
