It's one of the few comprehensive multichannel effect suites, where the effects can be easily spun around your head. If you work in stereo you can stereoize a mono signal with the offset parameter. I generally find small amounts (< 2) to be imperceptible but felt.robisme wrote: Thu Jan 15, 2026 11:04 am So, basicaly, I would be glad to give Uhbik its particular job, where it really shines, but I can't figure in which cases.
The modulation added in v2 opened up the creative possibilities. All the Uhbiks have an envelope and it really helps to leverage it; makes it reactive to the material (or a sidechain), while LFOs can stay rigid to BPM or rate. There's also a mapper for sequencing/time domain shaping, that can sync to whatever is driving it. All modulators can be shaped, quantized, slewed. Slew is useful for calming it down.
Send signals to the scope so you can see exactly what they're doing. It's often program-dependent. I can't stress enough how useful envelope follower is, I use them in many scenarios outside of Uhbik (e.g., Kilohearts).
In every effect, look for possible modulation targets, and how the program material might be able to drive it via envelope. Modulation can modulate each other, that's how you get them to sync.
Uhbik compressor's Inflation is an upward expander. It works the same time as the downward compressor, so it's being sandwiched. Envelope can catch transients; try faster modulation on percussion, and a slower one on pads. Making a pad breathe helps it from being boring. There's a preset in there that shows how it's done.
Ambiance, similarly, use the modulation to your advantage. One of the presets pans it around the surround/stereo field, and another modulates the smearing which can be effective as an alternative to chorus.
EQ's got two flexible bands and a low shelf at low CPU. The EQ's bands are designed to be modulated, so have them react, for example, to the envelope follower. Two bands is plenty for formants. Offset for unique harmonic tremolo, and combine with modulation to go beyond.
The Flanger sounds great and Bass Sanctuary lets you put it on wideband material with no fear. Tremolo powers up with LFOs providing polymeter and polyrhythm. Grainshift has two modes. Granular is your more standard pitch shift. Mix in an octave with offset for nice widening, modulate for interest. And Urs hinted at less-standard operation. Phase vocoder is spectral and beyond the scope of this comment. Uhbik can get very deep and while you can dive in and experiment, it helps to work with intent. There's a paucity in Uhbik 2 tutorial videos (Urs explained why) but quite a few on the concepts.
