The Baby Audio Plugins Bundle is an all-encompassing, boutique plug-in bundle comprised of six world-class effects. Included in this bundle is the I Heart NY, Parallel Aggressor, Comeback Kid, Super VHS, Spaced Out and Smooth Operator. All the plugins have been carefully and precisely engineered to help your music stand out from the crowd, by implementing highly detailed analog modelling to give your tracks that professional edge. Not just a marketing claim, the analog modelling has been taken from classic vintage gear, carefully crafting naturally occurring behaviours such as frequency response curves, noise level and saturation into these plugins to give you a huge array of sonic colouration. Download Plugin => Baby Audio
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The name Waves has been synonymous with quality plug-ins ever since the early days of Pro Tools, and the excellence of their products has usually been reflected in their prices. This has put them out of the reach of many musicians and home-studio owners, who simply can't afford to fork out for a plug-in bundle that costs as much as the computer it runs on. With this in mind, Waves have now produced their most affordable product yet in the shape of the Musicians Bundle. Despite the lack of an apostrophe, this is not a bundle of musicians, but a set of five software plug-ins targeted at the musician. Or should that be 'at musicians'? Perhaps it's another case for Lynne Truss and her squad of highly trained pedants. Musicians Bundle is available in all common formats on Mac OS 9, OS X and Windows — RTAS, VST, MAS, Direct X and Audiosuite — and four of its five constituents are plucked from other Waves bundles. Metaflanger and Supertap hail originally from the Pro FX bund...
Reverberate 2 is an incredibly powerful and flexible reverb, but it still presents something of a learning curve to anyone who’s familiar only with traditional algorithmic units. By contrast, Seventh Heaven Professional is designed to operate much more like a hardware reverberator, right down to the reassuringly retro red LED display. Thankfully, however, LiquidSonics haven’t been too slavish about reproducing the M7’s 1U rackmounting front panel in GUI form; there’s no faux brushed metal or 3D rendered knobs on the Seventh Heaven interface, and it’s been sensibly formatted in a less long and thin package than the original. They’ve also taken the opportunity to add useful level meters for the inputs, early reflections, late reflections and ‘VLF’ (the sub-200Hz component of the output). I imagine quite a few users won’t ever need to do more than click on the two red text displays in the centre of the window. These are used to select presets from within 10 banks l...
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