Menu Sidebar
Menu

Chris

Hi! I've got a new plugin you can have! These plugins come in Mac AU, and Mac, Windows and Linux VST. They are state of the art sound, have no DRM, and have totally minimal generic interface so you focus on your sounds.

PurestGain

PurestGain is by request of some friends who really liked PurestDrive! It’s a free universal binary Audio Unit and it’s a gain trim plugin. That’s all.

…well, unless you count that it’s running the same 80 bit internal processing buss that PurestDrive has, the same noise shaping to the CoreAudio 32 bit internal buss, the same total refusal to produce any quantization distortion ever, and on top of that since it’s a gain plugin it also is running a smoothing algorithm to completely eliminate zipper noise from adjusting the control, even.

So basically, this freebie is the most ultimate ‘analog’ gain knob anybody could ever want, because some people loved the sound of PurestDrive so much they wanted a simple gain control just as uncompromising, and I made it a freebie. If this proves useful or just makes you happy to know your gain trim is beyond reproach, try PurestDrive. And be sure to get either Ditherbox, or the freebie DitherTo, so you can audition this stuff while dithering to 24 bit for your monitoring and high resolution file making needs! Just because stuff can happen around the 32 bit float quantizing (which is a 24 bit word and a mantissa, remember) that shows up over 24 bit audio, doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be dithering every time you go to fixed point :)

ElectroHat

ElectroHatDemo is a universal binary Audio Unit plugin on a mission: it intends to take the place of samples and vintage drum machines, turning any old rhythmic sound into a crisp synthetic and very electronic hi-hat!

It will also do a decent snare if you like bright 606-style snares (look into Noise if you’re interested in something darker). The real heart of ElectroHat, however, is the hi-hats. This plugin gives you a huge variety (literally, 3000) of synthetic hat sounds each of which are adjustable for extra brightness. Pick between Syn Hat, Electro Hat, and Dense Hat and use the Trim to dial in the sound—pay attention to the nodes where the algorithm gets weird, as those can produce unique percussive sounds too—and use Brighten to control just how trebly the hat will be. Output Pad starts you off with a nicely attenuated volume. Don’t crank your hat too hard, it’s got a ton of sweet top end that should be treated with respect and can cut through any mix without getting in the way!

If you have trouble getting a track or software instrument trigger to work with ElectroHat, remember that you want to be feeding it the volume envelope of a hi-hat, as a source sound. For soft-attacked things you may want to increase the definition of the stick attack. Do that by using the free DigitalBlack2 plugin to gate your guide sound (route a sound to an aux to process it without altering the original tone if it’s audible in your mix) and then use the free Point transient designer plugin to add ‘pop’ to the attack. The video will show you how to do that, on even a muted synth bass playing psytrance 16ths! If you don’t like the way ElectroHat extends right up into the supersonic range, you can use the free Slew2 plugin to whack off the very top to your taste. This one takes amazing advantage of the broad range of Airwindows freebies to extend its usefulness.

Why trigger from audio tracks, rather than sequence stuff in DAW MIDI and softsynths? Because if your audio track is tighter than DAW MIDI because it’s recorded off a synth or drumkit using hardware sequencing (an analog drum machine, a vintage 808, an Atari computer, my Kawai Q-80 sequencer) then ElectroHat will be triggered off that tighter-than-DAW recording. DAWs hiccup at times, don’t always trigger stuff as perfectly as we’d like. ElectroHat can hit with sub-sample accuracy if the underlying track has that. There’s nothing else that can produce an ‘organic’, evolving hihat tone that is also totally electronic-sounding for modern music and tracks the groove that tightly. You can use this capacity to ‘sequence’ all kinds of things using just delays and echos from a simple guide track, all with hardware-sequencer tightness—the video shows you that, too.

ElectroHat can be the new go-to electronic sizzle! Its tones have huge variation within a range of crisp and bright synthetic tonalities with more character and smoothness than simple noise, it sounds a world apart from even round-robined sample triggering, and best of all it can groove like hardware because it literally inherits the exact timing of whatever you’re driving it with! Whether that’s recordings of a classic groovebox, or just you slapping your pant leg and micing it, the groove is perfect: and nothing is more important.

ElectroHat is $50.




PurestDrive

PurestDriveDemo is unusual, even startling. What’s the deal with suddenly putting out the simplest imaginable softclip/saturation… not even a safety clipper, ADClip does that… for $50?

It’s about the tone—and it’s about the R&D. PurestDrive is a sort of science project, and it’s using some Airwindows techniques at a level I’ve never before attempted, to produce a plugin that I can legitimately say is a mastering-grade softclip. No matter who you are or what you’re monitoring on, PurestDrive ought to deliver totally ‘analog tone’ with absolutely no thinning of bass, no leaching of depth, none of what even the most sophisticated digital plugins tend to do.

Part of the experiment is about just such sophistication. Consider a mixing board full of parts and op-amps and things. Now, consider a boutique pre, which might have a special gain stage with just one or two carefully chosen transistors or tubes, and which delivers a far more transparent tone than the full mixing board. Well, modern digital is the mixing board. All the things we do to fight aliasing, to model every little detail of a circuit, involve thousands or tens of thousands of math operations on the signal. In every single one, something is lost: word length is always limited.

Since we’re talking about digital word lengths inside the plugins that are floating point and 32 bits or more in depth, we might very well assume it’s okay and you can do all of that with no sonic cost. It’s easy to jump to that conclusion if you’ve literally never heard anything else, and since raw digital is still kind of spikey and too clean to feel ‘analog’. We trade off a little tonal purity for ‘analog color’ in today’s world, and consider it a win, unthinkingly.

Try the PurestDrive demo, and compare anything you’ve got to what PurestDrive can do. It runs on an internal 80-bit floating point buss, it does its math at that insanely high resolution, it touches the signal as lightly as possible to produce its sound, and it noise-shapes back to the DAW’s floating point buss when it’s done. It’s a proof-of-concept for a new sonic approach to digital that is largely subtractive, dependent on great A/D conversion, and dedicated to retaining depth of tone throughout the process. And it sounds different from other software saturations (even my previous ones) by sounding like nothing at all: totally transparent, with no tonal cues other than the saturation itself. There’s tricks to help resist aliasing but mostly it does that through subtlety alone—it’s not adding enough grit to include aliasing hash.

It’s not just a technology demo, though. If you use it on channels (where you basically can’t hear it) and then you also use it on the mix buss, you suddenly get a degree of clean headroom that sounds like French House: incredibly fat and punchy. This plugin alone, plus maybe a safety clipper, can give you a particular ‘loudness/fullness tone’ over the whole mix. Because of the raw simplicity of the code it’s highly CPU-efficient, so you can run it on huge mixes, and make them be astonishingly big with one plugin alone, without losing any richness of tone at all. And that’s just about unique for this type of plugin, which usually trades off a little depth for artificial color. Not anymore!

PurestDrive is $50.

Welcome to the completed site rebuild!

Here’s where I rebuilt the whole site in classier, searchable, organized form… and added thirty free Audio Unit plugins. A big day! (can you find them? They include some truly amazing secret weapons. I could tell you which, but then they wouldn’t be a secret, would they?)

Newer Posts
Older Posts

Airwindows

handsewn bespoke digital audio

Kinds Of Things

The Last Year

Patreon Promo Club

altruistmusic.com

Dave Robertson and the Kiss List

Decibelia Nix

Gamma1734

GuitarTraveller

ivosight.com – courtesy Johnny Wishoff

Podigy Podcast Editing Service

Super Synthesis Eurorack Modules

Very Rich Bandcamp

If you’re pledging the equivalent of three or more plugins per year, I’ll happily link you on the sidebar, including a link to your music or project! Message me to ask.