Pulsar Modular P914 FFB v1.5.3 WiN

Random News

Pulsar Modular P914 FFB v1.5.3 WiN
TapesOnToast 808 Drum Kit WAV
<<<<<<<<<<< 10-11-2024, 14:21 >>>>>>>>>>
TapesOnToast 808 Drum Kit WAV
Keyo | 10 November 2024 | 4.93 MB Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality…

Minimal Audio Fuse Compressor v1.0.4 WiN
<<<<<<<<<<< 9-11-2024, 17:27 >>>>>>>>>>
Minimal Audio Fuse Compressor v1.0.4 WiN
Team R2R | 09 November 2024 | 12.5 MB Fuse Compressor is a dynamic sculpting effect. Add energy and clarity…

NITELIFE Audio Drumpak: Garage Grooves WAV
<<<<<<<<<<< 11-12-2024, 08:51 >>>>>>>>>>
NITELIFE Audio Drumpak: Garage Grooves WAV
FANTASTiC | 10 December 2024 | 133.44 MB A classy collection of bumpin’ and flexin’ four-to-the-floor and…

Wavesequencer Hyperion v1.59 Incl Content WiN
<<<<<<<<<<< 26-09-2024, 22:02 >>>>>>>>>>
Wavesequencer Hyperion v1.59 Incl Content WiN
BUBBiX | 26 September 2024 | 177 MB With over 40 released updates since it's launch Hyperion has evolved and…

Archive

December 2024 (676)
November 2024 (944)
October 2024 (882)
September 2024 (883)
August 2024 (762)
July 2024 (842)
23-03-2022, 12:37

Pulsar Modular P914 FFB v1.5.3 WiN

Pulsar Modular P914 FFB v1.5.3 WiN

Team R2R | 23 March 2022 | 11.5 MB

At a time when Bob Moog and others were pioneering the concept of voltage control for oscillators, filters, amplifiers, and more, Bob Moog again broke the mold and conceived a fixed filter bank; no voltage control! This was not an equalizer although it had certain visual characteristics of one. No, the intent of the FFB was to enhance the primary signal, adding harmonics at specific frequencies or removing them at others. This was a time when musicians and engineers were struggling to come to terms with the new synthesizers charging across the music industry and how to employ them in the composing and performing world.

Some wanted completely new and never before heard sonic landscapes to push themselves and their audiences into new worlds of musical experience. Others wanted to create more traditional and familiar sounds, while still pushing the boundaries and making use of the new voltage controls, features, and character not available in a traditional “un-plugged” instrument. Some wanted both. Enter the Moog Fixed Filter Bank. A filter which helped composers and performers by allowing them to add subtle or not so subtle resonances to the signal or removing frequency bands altogether. This process, when mixed in with the unaltered, “dry” signal, can mimic the actual behavior of a traditional instrument which has inherent natural, resonant modes due to construction and design. It can also act on its own as a unique and creative source of sound shaping possibilities not available in other filter structures. It's a wonderful module and addition to any musical composition whether traditional or on the edge.

Of course, musicians are not going to confine their creativity to an intended use! This filter opens up amazing sonic vistas by adding a unique emphasis and bite to a signal. This results in an effect that goes beyond a basic equalizer by adding or subtracting harmonic content to a signal at specific points in the frequency spectrum.

This plug-in of course started with the genius and vision of Bob Moog. The next stage came with the resurgence of analog modular synthesizers and those who were resurrecting the great modules of the past and developing new modules for the future. Several clones of the 914 were being introduced primarily based on active filter design structures. The original structure of the 914, using simple inductors, capacitors, and resistors for the filter cells, has subtle interactions which become lost in the sterile world of semiconductors. These recent efforts were valiant and produced clones worthy of admiration. However, a design based on The original structure was begging to be pursued. A source for inductors was found, the schematics were scrutinized, errors in the schematics from copying were weeded out, circuit boards were designed, and the result was an extremely accurate and faithful copy of the original response as published by Moog in their original owner's manual, see the 914 FFB page at http://moogarchives.com/.

With a solid hardware version in hand, a software model could begin. Careful characterization and measurement of the hardware, along with a software model keeping the unique structure of the Moog FFB with its two stage design, has resulted in a software model that faithfully matches and follows that of the original. Adding some extra features, such as being able to direct the output of each cell to either the left or right channel, opens up additional possibilities that add to the charm, utility, and character of the filter.

The Pulsar 914 is simply put, a meticulous, spot-on implementation of the Inductor 914 Fixed Filter Bank.

Features

Features fourteen vintage style fixed frequency, inductor based filters.
There is a LP and a HP shelf filter
Twelve Band Pass filters are set at half octave interval spacings, which range from 125 Hz through to 5.8kHz.
Option to split into two six band filters (175Hz, 350Hz, 700Hz, 1.4kHz, 2.8Khz and 5.6 kHz plus Low Pass) for the Left Channel, and the alternate six bands (125 Hz, 250 Hz, 500 Hz, 1kHz, 2 kHz, 4kHz plus High Pass) for the Right channel. This is a very musical split, as it can perform as two separate Fixed Filter Banks with Octave spacing between filters, and the Right channel is offset against the Left channel by a half octave.
Wet-Dry cross fader mixes between the treated signal and the dry or external signal , again with manual and Voltage Controlled panning between banks.
Zero latency
macOS: AU, AAX and VST3 formats.
Windows: VST3 and AAX formats.



home page:
https://bit.ly/3wtM8F0


DOWNLOAD

You like the news? Please share this news in social networks



Related News:

Samplecraze Active Passive Graphic Parametric Fixed and Peaking Eqs TUTORiALSamplecraze Active Passive Graphic Parametric Fixed and Peaking Eqs TUTORiAL

FANTASTiC | 02 November 2020 | 89 MB What are the various types of equaliser designs/topologies what are the differences between them, and how and when to use them. Active, Passive, Graphic, Parametric, Fixed and Peaking Eqs is a video tutorial that explains the differences between and the various equaliser topologies....
Signal Audio and Image ProcessingSignal Audio and Image Processing

English | 2018 | ASIN: B07DYHTZ11 | 89 Pages | EPUB | 1.56 MB This project shows some selected signal techniques, including image and audio processing, using the Matlab digital signal processing and image processing toolboxes. The project is divided to 3 parts. Part I includes design and implementation of different types of filters for filtering signal that has different sinusoidal frequency...
Audio Assault FreakQ 305 v1.0 WiN MacOSXAudio Assault FreakQ 305 v1.0 WiN MacOSX

P2P | 19 March 2018 | WiN: 196 MB | MAC: 150 MB FreakQ 305 is an analog inspired non-linear equalizer that embraces the power of your DAW while delivering the sheen and warmth of analog! This equalizer allows you to sculpt and shape your tones in unheard of ways to create something truly unique! Focusing on delivering the flavor of analog without the noise, FreakQ 305 does not model any specific...
HoRNet Sybilla Pro VST VST3 AU RTAS AAX v1.1.0 OSX/WIN RETAiLHoRNet Sybilla Pro VST VST3 AU RTAS AAX v1.1.0 OSX/WIN RETAiL

P2P | July 21 2016 | 22 MB Sybilla Pro is a multi filter de-esser, unlike other traditional de-essers Sybilla Pro has 8 different tunable filters to effectively find the offending sibilance and feed the compressor that will reduce it....

  Views: 542
Views: 542

- THANKS FROM THE USERS -

Nobody said thanks, but you can be first!

Comments for Pulsar Modular P914 FFB v1.5.3 WiN:

No comments yet, add a comment!

Information

Would you like to leave your comment? Please Login to your account to leave comments. Don't have an account? You can create a free account now.

Member Login


Social Networking Login: