James Peck has announced the release of VHS Audio Degradation Suite, a free lo-fi multi-effect for Native Instruments Reaktor.
A growing trend in music I’ve noticed in the past decade is degrading the fidelity of a sound in a way that is musical, nostalgic, and reminiscent of older playback devices. With all of the technically perfect synthesizers and pristine guitar tones available at the click of a preset, many producers (myself included) search for ways to inject character and grit into their tracks.
See also: SLOW – Free Experimental Reverb For NI ReaktorIn the VHS Audio Degradation Suite (available for NI Reaktor free of charge – full version required), the user can dial in everything that made old VHS tapes and audio cassettes sound the way they did. Tape wow, flutter, speed, wear, hum, hiss, tone, EQ, compression, saturation, chorus, and delay are all included to create the depth of sound that, to my ear at least, is pretty convincing. There is even a simple “sum to mono” function which often makes modern stereo synth patches sound a bit older.
Here’s a clip of me trying out the plugin on one of my tracks:
The most important feature here for me, however, is the pitch modulation. Finding a plugin to create pitch modulation with random artifacts that convincingly mimicked tape is pretty difficult, but I think they may have nailed it. Using the wow and flutter controls along with the “warp” function seems to do the trick.
This plugin also comes with some unexpected features such as mic emulation, preamp controls, and quirky preset names such as “Raindrops falling down the window of your 32nd floor Tokyo condo at 6:45 PM”. I was thinking about buying some expensive UAD tape emulators which have similar controls to the Audio Degradation Suite has, but considering this is free, it might end up substituting those expensive plugins nicely.
VHS Audio Degradation Suite is available for free download via Native Instruments (49.7 MB download size, ENS format for NI Reaktor).
6 Comments
Roman
onGrabbed it the day it was released and can’t get over it! It is fantastic! No, it’s F A N TA S T I C.
Mathieu
onMmmm….you should write in BOLD + CAPS that you need Reaktor Full version…sadly
Tomislav Zlatic
onAs far as I know, all Reaktor ensembles require the full version, no? Apart from the ones made by NI? I could be wrong, though.
JoeHF
onWow, gorgeous! But it apparently needs Reaktor 6 (and I only have 5). Ah, well. :-/
question_man
onSince I don’t use Reaktor, I’ll stick with https://www.kvraudio.com/product/devicer-by-plektron. I don’t know if VHS fx are comparable, any other suggestions?
Tomislav Zlatic
oniZotope Vinyl also emulates pitch instability: https://bedroomproducersblog.com/2016/02/02/izotope-vinyl-64-bit-free/