I honestly don't understand what people did before SLAM2. It's magical.
It can give e.g. the sound of a high-end analog master (you know the depth and the smoothness of basses and snappy, but non-piercing highs).
I don't know what they did before these types of plug-ins.
Any other plug-ins? Or ideas regarding how would one mix if one wanted to emulate what the plug-ins do?
I read that a lot of it has to do with push-pull type of EQ (you peak up the nice part, while reducing the bad part) with cleverly placed frequency-dependent tube-style distortions.
But it sounds nothing like just EQ + Scream 4, the SLAM2 just gives much more 3Dness. Maybe they just knew really well where to place their filters.
It can give e.g. the sound of a high-end analog master (you know the depth and the smoothness of basses and snappy, but non-piercing highs).
I don't know what they did before these types of plug-ins.
Any other plug-ins? Or ideas regarding how would one mix if one wanted to emulate what the plug-ins do?
I read that a lot of it has to do with push-pull type of EQ (you peak up the nice part, while reducing the bad part) with cleverly placed frequency-dependent tube-style distortions.
But it sounds nothing like just EQ + Scream 4, the SLAM2 just gives much more 3Dness. Maybe they just knew really well where to place their filters.
Statistics: Posted by soundmodel — Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:56 am