Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  

News:

Pages: [1]   Go Down

Author Topic: NorthPole (filter)  (Read 5336 times)

supernova777

  • Guest
Logged

supernova777

  • Guest
Re: NorthPole (filter)
« Reply #1 on: July 29, 2014, 11:52:35 AM »

Quote
Prosoniq Northpole: "I'm a long-term addict, first using this freeware plug-in in its VST format with Cubase. Northpole is a 24dB/octave (four-pole) low-pass and band-pass resonant filter, plus distortion and a simple delay. It's an excellent quick and dirty lo-fi fix for digital synth sounds that otherwise would be rather too squeaky clean. And, yes, it will howl like a wounded werewolf. Apart from kicking the sand in the face of drum loops, I use this a lot as a special effect on vocals for those 'there's a psycho on the phone' moments. Its simplicity is both a strength and a weakness. On the one hand you just twiddle the controls until you come up with something interesting. On the other, delay settings have to be set in the old-school style by ear (and also by careful nudging of the sliders), as it doesn't slave to MIDI clock." Nick Rowland

is this vst or rtas?
anyone have this working?
Logged

MacTron

  • Staff Member
  • 2048 MB
  • ******
  • Posts: 2116
  • keep it simple
Re: NorthPole (filter)
« Reply #2 on: July 29, 2014, 12:26:05 PM »

Quote
Prosoniq Northpole: "I'm a long-term addict, first using this freeware plug-in in its VST format with Cubase. Northpole is a 24dB/octave (four-pole) low-pass and band-pass resonant filter, plus distortion and a simple delay. It's an excellent quick and dirty lo-fi fix for digital synth sounds that otherwise would be rather too squeaky clean. And, yes, it will howl like a wounded werewolf. Apart from kicking the sand in the face of drum loops, I use this a lot as a special effect on vocals for those 'there's a psycho on the phone' moments. Its simplicity is both a strength and a weakness. On the one hand you just twiddle the controls until you come up with something interesting. On the other, delay settings have to be set in the old-school style by ear (and also by careful nudging of the sliders), as it doesn't slave to MIDI clock." Nick Rowland

is this vst or rtas?
anyone have this working?

VST and RTAS.
Here it is...
But I don't share the opinion of this guy...
Logged
Please don't PM about things that are not private.
Pages: [1]   Go Up

Recent Topics