![]() ![]() There are two main components that cause time modulation in a vinyl record. The Dynamic control is the tricky one, what is does is time modulate the distortion components which are very frequency dependent due to the RIAA curve. The Color switch changes the character / interaction of the controls and sets the maximum amount of midrange / LF color and the HF compression characteristic. The Harmonic and Dynamic controls interact and control the level of the harmonic distortion. There are three main controls Harmonic, Dynamic and Color. On individual tracks it is also very useful in creating large fat sounds, smoothing of the harmonic content and making a nice smooth vintage sound on vocals and other instruments. Phoenix II uses 32-bit floating point math and has a lower noise floor than the original release.Peacock can be used on a stereo bus to create the classic vinyl sound. Phoenix II runs both NATIVE and DSP on Avid’s Pro Tools 10 AAX format. When the input trim and output trim controls are at 0 dB, (no change in gain) and no tape process is being added to the sound, the plugin is bit accurate, meaning the output exactly matches the input. This can be useful on material that is hitting close to or at digital zero and on material that has a low recorded level. The input trim can also be used to prevent clipping in the rare cases where clipping may be a problem and bringing up the level of a track for an increased amount of color. A level control determines the amount of Phoenix II that is integrated into the audio signal and an input trim determines "how hard you hit the tape." Because the DSP process is level dependent the input level trim control has been improved and an output trim control has been added. ![]() Gold is the position where the color is approximately flat in frequency response, with Sapphire being brighter, and Opal being a warmer tonality. The type is selected with a switch for easy comparison between the types and the brightness is also selected with a switch. ![]() Phoenix II has five different tape-analog characteristics. ![]() The Phoenix II process not only incorporates the nonlinear saturation characteristics created by magnetic tape itself, but also includes the interrelation of an analog tape recorder's record/reproduce electronics and equalization curves. Designed to emulate the unique properties of a magnetic tape machine ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |