Sten, the company behind that simulator is named Izotope and the plugin is called Vinyl. I get it mixed too with their Ozone plugin..."have you tried Izotope from Ozone... I mean Ozone from Izotope!" :) Anyway, no need to run stuff through WinAmp, there is VST plugin available too (not to mention bunch of other formats). And yes it's free. http://www.izotope.com/products/audio/vinyl/ -sampsa On Thu, 18 May 2006 12:56:50 +0000 concreationist <concreationist@...> wrote: > > Thanks for the tip! > > I recently found a vinyl simulator called Izotope which is a free > plugin for WinAmp. Most of the settings tend to distort a little but > the grit is certainly there. This DSP plugin can be combined with the > disk writer plugin to route the output straight to a WAV file. > > Sten > > > --- In elektron-users@yahoogroups.com, "berries_gulberry" > <berries_gulberry@...> wrote: > > > > Sometimes I like how clean the <D is, othertimes I hate it. It depends > > which machines you deploy, I guess. I use a sherman filterbank to > deal > > with some of the sterility, and sometimes an old spring reverb. Any > > analogue gear (filters, eq, compressors, springs) tends to help - > even > > if just let the MD signal pass through it without any twiddling. > > > > Some of the Reaktor modules sound really good (not quite analogue, > not > > quite digital), so you might want to chuck the MD through that. In > > fact, for a 'from vinyl' sound, you could use an ensemble from > reaktor > > 4 called BanaanElectrique, followed in the chain by one of the > > compressor modules. > > > > I"ve only just realised myself that the MD might be best seen as a > > 'source' to be further affected rather than a complete instrument in > > itself. Not that it doesn't sound very good on its own, but because > my > > ears get tired (sometimes literally) of the same frequency > configurations. ____________________ Sampsa Lehtonen
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[elektron] Re: Grit
2006-05-18 by snlehton@cc.hut.fi
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