There are people who love the sound of the vinyl. Is it possible to reproduce a similar vinyl sound effect using sophisticated plugins available nowdays? Maybe someone knows and could share the gold. And I just want to point out that I don't mean a slowdown effect.
just tried it. used LP noise effect. I already have the crackle in my track so I had the first dial set to zero and second one was just noise so i set that to 0 as well. i tried playing with the year dial and i couldnt tell any difference in the sound, maybe because with the other 2 dials set to 0 it has no effect
One interesting thing about vinyl LPs I recently found out is that the closer you get to the centre, the less bass you have, so album track orders used to be partly dictated by where you needed the most bass.
Here is my track i used izotope Vinyl plugin on. I did some eq after it to compensate for the leveled subs and also, I cut some hi's that izotope raised. i dont deal with vinyls so i wouldnt tell if it sounds close to vinyl like. but i can say it sounds less digital comparing to what i had before inserting izotope.
What is most noticeable to me, when I play a vinyl then a CD version of the same album, is simply that you can hear differences in both the highest and the lowest frequencies. Low frequencies tend to be rolled-off and high frequencies lack some dynamics. I have a fairly simple EQ in my home stereo setup and, shortly after buying my first CDs (which were then a novelty, at electronics stores), I found that I could give my CDs an LP-like treatment just by attenuating (especially) the highest frequencies. I also found that some CDs gave my speakers an annoying deep "buzz," probably caused by very low frequencies that my records didn't have.
The shift in hi/lo frequencies is pretty understandable, in order to better press high-frequencies into vinyl material, and to avoid needle jumping out of the groove, all audio is "shifted", highs are boosted and lows are cut. Then you need a "phono preamp" which applies the inverted curve (cut highs, boosted lows), also called a RIAA Curve. That's why when you listen to vinyl without a riaa preamp, it sounds horrible
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The MAYA44 XTe is a high quality 24-bit / 96 kHz 4-in / 4-out PCIe audio interface, providing a number of powerful and amazing features optimized for home recording on a professional quality level and for various DJ applications.
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