Best plugin to create warm vintage silence?
- KVRAF
- 18444 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
I’ve got a 47 gb sample library of all the classic analog silence from every single classic synthesizer, compressor, preamp and console. All lovingly recorded while they’re turned off by a naked mother breast feeding her newborn. PM me for purchase details.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
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- KVRAF
- 2315 posts since 24 Jun, 2006 from London, England
Pls let Acustica know so they can put out a new silent channel stripzerocrossing wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 6:37 pm I’ve got a 47 gb sample library of all the classic analog silence from every single classic synthesizer, compressor, preamp and console.
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- KVRian
- 1163 posts since 2 Oct, 2021
I am a digital snob so to tackle this subject I think of the classic anechoic room simulator.
Being rather bored by such sophisticated and complicated solutions I asked Chad from the BeeGeeTees and he suggested to try the MUTE button.
It goes down to -132dB most of the time or lower.
If you wanna do it right just use a buffered bypass gate of your favourite guitar pedal.
And there is a recording called something like "3:12" or so where Brian Eno did it fully analogue. That could be sampled from the original vinyl and layered with all those rediculous digital modern wannabe solutions. Pfff.
Being rather bored by such sophisticated and complicated solutions I asked Chad from the BeeGeeTees and he suggested to try the MUTE button.
It goes down to -132dB most of the time or lower.
If you wanna do it right just use a buffered bypass gate of your favourite guitar pedal.
And there is a recording called something like "3:12" or so where Brian Eno did it fully analogue. That could be sampled from the original vinyl and layered with all those rediculous digital modern wannabe solutions. Pfff.
ABX is enemy to GAS
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- KVRist
- 41 posts since 17 Jan, 2026
I use a tone of distortions, amps, saturators, preamps, little feedback on a lead synth or two each track, usually my bass too and sometimes vocals. Sometimes they even get too out of control when silent and I have to automate track mutes, but the benefit of that white noise underneath everything is it really glues it all together. It makes it feel like a real room with musicians and audio equipment.
Sometimes if it’s just a drum break and it’s extra quiet I have to automate the feedback noise down, but it’s indispensable, so you are on to something. Having background noise during silence/relatively sparse sections sounds so good
Sometimes if it’s just a drum break and it’s extra quiet I have to automate the feedback noise down, but it’s indispensable, so you are on to something. Having background noise during silence/relatively sparse sections sounds so good
- KVRAF
- 18444 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
Reported for taking the question seriously.MattCable wrote: Sun Jan 18, 2026 7:27 pm I use a tone of distortions, amps, saturators, preamps, little feedback on a lead synth or two each track, usually my bass too and sometimes vocals. Sometimes they even get too out of control when silent and I have to automate track mutes, but the benefit of that white noise underneath everything is it really glues it all together. It makes it feel like a real room with musicians and audio equipment.
Sometimes if it’s just a drum break and it’s extra quiet I have to automate the feedback noise down, but it’s indispensable, so you are on to something. Having background noise during silence/relatively sparse sections sounds so good
I’m a guitarist, and there’s always some electric guitar in my music, so that makes having to look for alternative noice sources unnecessary. Some of my hardware synthesizers also have a bit of a noise floor issue too. I do feel like the hunt for a super low noise floor is responsible for a lot of the clinical vibe a lot of modern music has.
But that’s not silence. That’s noise.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
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- KVRian
- 1163 posts since 2 Oct, 2021
Yeah, after all the BAD analog noise that we tried to avoid (gates, Dolby, etc) back then now we inject noise again because...
And then I recently learned that there are all colors of noise, not only white and pink...
So it will be with silence.
Let it be dithered.
And then I recently learned that there are all colors of noise, not only white and pink...
So it will be with silence.
Let it be dithered.
ABX is enemy to GAS
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- KVRist
- 41 posts since 17 Jan, 2026
I saw everyone roasting away and thought to myself “idk it’s a good question” lmaozerocrossing wrote: Sun Jan 18, 2026 8:00 pmReported for taking the question seriously.MattCable wrote: Sun Jan 18, 2026 7:27 pm I use a tone of distortions, amps, saturators, preamps, little feedback on a lead synth or two each track, usually my bass too and sometimes vocals. Sometimes they even get too out of control when silent and I have to automate track mutes, but the benefit of that white noise underneath everything is it really glues it all together. It makes it feel like a real room with musicians and audio equipment.
Sometimes if it’s just a drum break and it’s extra quiet I have to automate the feedback noise down, but it’s indispensable, so you are on to something. Having background noise during silence/relatively sparse sections sounds so good
I’m a guitarist, and there’s always some electric guitar in my music, so that makes having to look for alternative noice sources unnecessary. Some of my hardware synthesizers also have a bit of a noise floor issue too. I do feel like the hunt for a super low noise floor is responsible for a lot of the clinical vibe a lot of modern music has.
But that’s not silence. That’s noise.
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grandmasterbird grandmasterbird https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=134988
- KVRist
- 439 posts since 7 Jan, 2007
Do you take PayPal?zerocrossing wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 6:37 pm I’ve got a 47 gb sample library of all the classic analog silence from every single classic synthesizer, compressor, preamp and console. All lovingly recorded while they’re turned off by a naked mother breast feeding her newborn. PM me for purchase details.
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- KVRAF
- 2068 posts since 13 Dec, 2016
Try this on a dedicated silence bus under the whole mix (or only in gaps):
- very low room tone or distant rumble plus a separate wideband hiss layer
- dynamic EQ or multiband comp keyed from the mix so the silence ducks under dense parts and blooms in gaps
- add vintage motion: extremely slow wow/flutter on the hiss and a drifting mains hum (50/60 Hz plus harmonics, not a fixed sine)
- finish with noise-shaped dither
Bonus:
- convolve the room tone with an empty studio IR and lightly saturate the bus so the noise floor breathes instead of sitting there.
TL;DR:
don’t buy huge libraries of off-gear silence. Make your silence react to the music and it stops feeling clinical.
- very low room tone or distant rumble plus a separate wideband hiss layer
- dynamic EQ or multiband comp keyed from the mix so the silence ducks under dense parts and blooms in gaps
- add vintage motion: extremely slow wow/flutter on the hiss and a drifting mains hum (50/60 Hz plus harmonics, not a fixed sine)
- finish with noise-shaped dither
Bonus:
- convolve the room tone with an empty studio IR and lightly saturate the bus so the noise floor breathes instead of sitting there.
TL;DR:
don’t buy huge libraries of off-gear silence. Make your silence react to the music and it stops feeling clinical.
Its over for Bitwig--CUBASE WON !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- KVRAF
- 18444 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
PayPal and ritual sacrifice.grandmasterbird wrote: Mon Jan 19, 2026 9:19 amDo you take PayPal?zerocrossing wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 6:37 pm I’ve got a 47 gb sample library of all the classic analog silence from every single classic synthesizer, compressor, preamp and console. All lovingly recorded while they’re turned off by a naked mother breast feeding her newborn. PM me for purchase details.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
- KVRAF
- 6466 posts since 18 Jul, 2008 from New York
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- KVRAF
- 2166 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from For me to know, for you to find out
I turned my Biomat on full blast while listening to this plugin
I may never come back
I have a really fast computer, some good mics, vintage musical instruments, and lots of fancy software. Just need some talent
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- KVRian
- 1163 posts since 2 Oct, 2021
