I am looking for a plugin that will allow me to set up some frequency bands
and allow me to switch certain frequencies on/off so I can hone in on certain
frequencies quickly so I can balance the sound when I mix.
For instance if I want all frequencies to be set to the octave of the note C etc I would type in the root frequency and all notches would be set to the harmonics of C.
I have Wolf's Speqtrum EQ but I would like it to be more intensive and adaptable.
Thanks
Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
-
- Posts: 1743
- Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 4:00 pm
- Contact:
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
Maybe Dynomic is what you're looking for? There's a PDF manual you can read to decide if it might meet your needs.
cheers,
Mark
cheers,
Mark
-
- Posts: 1743
- Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 4:00 pm
- Contact:
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
Thanks Shroomz,
It's quite nice but not exactly what I'm looking for.
What you have here is good:
http://www.planetz.com/forums/viewtopic ... 16&t=25846
If you could create many bands and an on off switch for each it would be great.
Thanks
It's quite nice but not exactly what I'm looking for.
What you have here is good:
http://www.planetz.com/forums/viewtopic ... 16&t=25846
If you could create many bands and an on off switch for each it would be great.
Thanks
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
A device combining 'many bands' of Xtreme Cut would have a serious dsp cost. I'll ponder the idea, because I would like something like that myself, but there's no way it'll happen any time soon because sharc's working on a seriously time consuming device project & when I get some sdk time myself again I'll be going back to a synth I've been making in my spare time for a while.
Mark
Mark
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
I would love to see a Shroomz synth.
You're a picky fella' so it should be very interesting to hear it's abilities.
Nice News 4 Sure.
You're a picky fella' so it should be very interesting to hear it's abilities.
Nice News 4 Sure.
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
8 parallel bands of Xtreme Cut would eat up a lot of dsp (you wouldn't get them on anything less than a 14 dsp card), but you could experiment (emphasis on experiment) with something like what's pictured using HPLP devices (low on dsp) & a simple low dsp stereo channel mixer like the MIX-16S that my brother sharc made (it has mutes & solos).
Mark
edit - ignore those frequencies though, since I just threw those in there quickly.
Mark
edit - ignore those frequencies though, since I just threw those in there quickly.
- Attachments
-
- 8parallelHPLP.JPG (184.1 KiB) Viewed 3165 times
-
- Posts: 1743
- Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 4:00 pm
- Contact:
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
Thanks I will give that a go.
I appreciate your help.
I appreciate your help.
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
No problem at all. One of the most important things to remember if you're experimenting with this is that you've got variables on the crossover frequencies that you could benefit from or if not analyzing properly could be problematic. For example with the LP freq of a band & the HP freq of the next band separated enough you can create quite severe cuts in a particular frequency range, but doing that could work for you or against you depending on what you're trying to do. If you don't want to cut any frequencies at all you'll need to analyze the effect of your frequency settings in detail, which is why I said to ignore the frequency settings that I threw in there quickly.
Mark
Mark
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
It's got to be the best free software in it's field, but it has to be said that the most true representation the software is capable of is not a realtime one (which isn't really a big issue).
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
Hi James,
As you may know, you can couple several nodes to build such a cluster.
Simply set each node to twice the frequency of the previous node and activate the "couple" button.
If you then change the frequency of one of the nodes, all coupled nodes will follow this change while keeping their relationship (i.e. the octave stays a octave).
You can couple gain & frequency independant from each other.
cheers,
Wolfgang
You can do this with SpEQtrum via building a filter cluster.For instance if I want all frequencies to be set to the octave of the note C etc I would type in the root frequency and all notches would be set to the harmonics of C.
As you may know, you can couple several nodes to build such a cluster.
Simply set each node to twice the frequency of the previous node and activate the "couple" button.
If you then change the frequency of one of the nodes, all coupled nodes will follow this change while keeping their relationship (i.e. the octave stays a octave).
You can couple gain & frequency independant from each other.
cheers,
Wolfgang
-
- Posts: 1743
- Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 4:00 pm
- Contact:
Re: Band EQ/Filter for monitoring
Thanks Wolf. It would be great if you wrote a more explicit PDF for this EQ and its
potential.
I looks like one of the most tweakable EQs I have seen. The thing is I am no expert
on electronic circuits so I wouldn't know how different types of EQ affect sound.
If you need a donation just let me know I would be happy to learn its full potential.
potential.
I looks like one of the most tweakable EQs I have seen. The thing is I am no expert
on electronic circuits so I wouldn't know how different types of EQ affect sound.
If you need a donation just let me know I would be happy to learn its full potential.