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Cheeseverb

Newer Version:
Bucketverb
Cheeseverb has been replaced by: Bucketverb
Cheeseverb
Cheeseverb
Cheeseverb by reFuse Software is a Virtual Effect Audio Plugin for macOS and Windows. It functions as an Audio Units Plugin, a VST 3 Plugin and an AAX Plugin.
Product
Version
1.0.1
Windows 7 or higher. 64-bit DAW required.
Product
Version
1.0.1
10.8 Mountain Lion or higher. 64-bit DAW required.
Effect
Formats
Copy Protection
Key File
My KVR - Groups, Versions, & More
5 KVR members have added Cheeseverb to 3 My KVR groups 5 times.
Not In Your MY KVR Groups
(or group limitation prevents versioning)
+3 in private groups

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Lo-fi BBD Reverb

Features:

  • Analog modeled bucket-brigade (BBD) reverb.
  • Variable stereo width, even for mono sources.
  • Dark ambience from a lost era of technology.

Description

The Cheeseverb plug-in is an emulation of a rare beast: the electronic analog reverb. Based around a model of a long out-of-production bucket-brigade (BBD) chip with multiple, specially-spaced output taps, an array of delay signals are combined and recirculated to create a reverb-like signal – without washy diffusion artifacts.

One reason that BBD reverbs never caught on is that affordable digital reverbs came on the market around the same time, and in the '80s, that bright splashy sound was in high demand. The Cheeseverb does something different. Being a BBD circuit, it aggressively rolls off higher frequencies to avoid aliasing. The result is dark and rich, and because of the way it pans its various delay taps across the stereo field, it is particularly useful for taking a mono source and giving it some left-right spread.

Why call it the "Cheeseverb", then? Because this flavor of reverb is a non-realistic, primitive ambience that won't be fooling anybody into thinking they're hearing a natural space. As a traditional reverb, it's, well, cheesy.

But if you can live with that fact, then you might find that the Cheeseverb can be just the trick for giving instruments a unique space in your mixes. It is an excellent stereoizer of mono sources (try it on handclaps!). And because the Cheeseverb uses discrete delays to create its stereo spatialization, it can spread a signal wide without the usual phasey wash of a reverb.

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