Mr Worrall always has some completely surprising new information and uses for the plugins he reviews. He is one of the very few whose videos I can rewatch and learn new things.
It's kind of ridiculous that the maker of the hardware thought it was a good idea in the first place. What sort of weirdo would buy a hardware compressor because it's got a little drawing of a woman on the meter? I get my curves with EQ!
Thank you Dan! As always, this video is absolutely fantastic. Watched it 6 times now, it is so dense with pure information. Your channel is a University for mixing, learned so much from you. Forever grateful.
When you put the m/s comp on the main bus in paralleled side chain, that sounded awesome! It instantly made the track sound complete! Such a nice effect.
Thanks, @Dan, for your broad yet concise introductory review of Process.Audio's "Rockruepel Comp.Two" plugin, and *also* for sharing your highly relevant additional tips, tricks, and insights. After viewing this video, I feel much better able to articulate my thoughts about *why* I liked this plugin after I took it for a spin myself earlier this past week. I always look forward to your your concise video reviews, tutorials, demos, various opinions, etc. This, and all of your videos about products, techniques, thought processes, etc. that also interest me, but puzzle me in various ways, are extremely helpful.
Hi Dan, thank you for further expanding upon your answer to my question in your last video, as always your insight has been incredibly valuable, and I'm already experimenting with unlinking the stereo controls in my compressors in mix buses and in mastering stages to great effect.
Great video as always Dan. I bought the Comp.Two before even seeing your video with the plan to use it as a drum buss compressor, which was part of your conclusion. So that means watching all your previous videos have taught me enough to at least now be on the right track when analyzing new plugins. Only another 1,000 miles to go.....
So very much more than a plugin review. So many insights on all things compression. Trickery shows me how I need to think. Much more useful than just a critique. Thank you.
Hi Dan! First of all, thanks for your perspective and MS comp tips! I'm glad you're providing a UI/UX analysis of different plugins and I totally support you in your efforts to influence developers. I hope they will provide more useful stuff for us in the near future. I'm also with you on the interchangeability of EQs. After watching your videos and others, I assume that the majority of emulation plugins are simply a combination of simpler modules within a unique UI. You often combine Saturn with Pro-Q and Pro-C in your examples in the same manner. Ultimately, I believe we can use a narrow set of instruments and replicate the sound of different plugins. It will just require more instances of simpler ones. And when you actually work the digital eq is the best bet for me. So I wonder when a developer will create a modular EQ and compressor plugins with switchable character or circuitry emulation (such as saturation, stereo imaging, etc.) of beloved brands like Neve, SSL, Manley, while providing the same digital EQ section or compressors UI which also might switch algorithms (DMG Audio TrackComp 2). Notably, Kush split their AR-1 compressor and introduced a separate LG Drive. So inserting this kind of "character-only" plugin in a chain would also be an option, just like many mixers use channel strips plugins for analog sound emulation only. I understand that this way you sell fewer plugins. However, today, after 20+ years of digital audio, we should think of plugins not only as faithful emulations or new modern algorithms but also as problem solvers and time savers providing best possible UX. My second point is that a plugin should resolve complicated routing and trickery for us, like compressing sides with the mid signal, as you mentioned. Wouldn't it be cool to have a Pro-C instance built into the sidechain of Pro-C itself? It's cool that they have Pro-Q in it, right? By the way, for compressors with non-fixed ratio settings, the multiplier parameter might be a great addition. Recently, I revisited Jaycen Joshua's template and thought of the Rbass (Maxx Bass) plugin with built-in parallel compression/saturation and PS22, which probably replicates your comb filtering trick with a mono signal and its delayed copy. A standard features should be volume-compensated drive/headroom, linked with key modifier input/output stages and threshold/makeup gain. In this regard, I think of your Shadow Hills Comp review every time I use it or try to set the Black Box by increasing saturation, triode, and pentode while decreasing output. Small midi controllers like Behringer X-Touch Mini are great for this. Paradoxically, developers and mixers in the vintage days tried to improve and modify their gear only dreaming about our virtual tools and routing. Yet, now we're trying to limit our possibilities in the digital domain. So, I wouldn't mind having a UI aesthetically inspired by hardware but with rebuild digital interface and implemented tricks.
Thanks for sharing the wonderful bus compression style, and a very thorough look at this nice little compressor. The Klanghelm MJUC does have ratio controls, so I'll give that a try for some bus compression. Rockruepel Comp Two looks like a nice unit. Rockruepel means Rockpunk one might say.
Ha! If you think aliasing sounds analog .....and a major selling point of analog emulations is less tedious fiddling to get it to sound good for an application. Some of the really good ones actually get really close to sounding at 3d and silky as analog.... I don't of off a single stock compressor that does that. Cubase is way behind in addressing digital artifacts. They haven't even acknowledged their existence yet. And I think very highly of Cubase.
I have never really heard ringing From nyquist foldback Distortion. Like someone will make a plug-in to replicate the decap aliasing in the future for that 2020 sound haha
Another great vid again Dan and as usual you've uncovered in-built quirks that other reviewers wouldn't even find with a big map and torch. My lasting impression after listening to that drum loop for nearly 16 mins is that with Comp Two is that you have to PUSH IT, PUSH IT REAL GOOD!
Could you also take a look at the APU Loudness Compressor? The developer claims the compressor is based on how humans perceive loudness instead of being based around standard rms and peak parameters.
UADx Capitol Mastering Compressor by Universal Audio-one of the few UAD plugins that is able to run natively, without any external DSP hardware-is a fantastic vari-mu hardware emulation, and it offers a ratio control (albeit a rather hidden one). I'd reccomend taking a look at it, it sounds great on my 2-busses and drum submixes.
For what it’s worth, I think my hardware variable gain compressor has similar quadratic gain reduction curve. Even though all my explorations of various manuals point out to curve gradually sunsetting into limiting. I’ll measure today.
Hi Dan, I would love to see your take on the dynamic grading „compressor“ from Playfair audio. It’s seems pretty exotic and different from all the compressors I‘ve ever used. Maybe interesting for you as well?!
Great demo, Dano...Not going to lie, I was a little surprised by hearing you use "the very musical" term that has been a bit of a cliche since the early gearslutz days imho. I remember first using a Speck Audio EQ that was alleged "not to be very musical" (w/e that means?) and it turned out to make the music I was working on sound quite lovely, almost ....musical.
Any arguments towards feature limitations as a result of authenticity are moot, as I'm not aware of any real world Vari-Mu with a true wet/dry mix, I don't see how it would be possible irl. Indeed the real world version of this unit doesn't either, so agreed on all fronts re-makeup and headroom etc.
What about the following trick? Get delta signal from the compressor and mix it with dry signal but with delta signal boosted a bit. This should increase the ratio.
Two instances in series. The second instance has the original, uncompressed signal at its sidechain input. So both compressors have the same sidechain.
I kinda wish you would've pitch your voice down when playing with phase. A "Danth Vorrder" vocal sounds epic at natural pitch already :P Imagine a great "Star Wars" parody called "Audio Wars" with you saying "You don't know the power of the phase shift!"
Hey Dan, try Patchwork from Blue Cats with this for the Mix knob effect plus for input and output drive functions. I love this plugin just for that when I need it. Hope that helps.
@@DanWorrall I did not expect to get an answer here and got the Demo. No they have not changed anything. I played around a bit. Nice sound overall but Dunno. The lack of fine tuning of Attack and Release combined with the weird „graphics“ on the VU that remind me of car repair shops wall posters of the 80`s and the Restricted SC filter Frequencies make me give it a pass for now. Loved the video once more though.
You should sell a multi platform daw add on that allows the user to hover over stock plug knobs and get your quotes and notes to pop up in real time. I actually want dan worrall in a box 😊
I’m lost on the first “increase effective ratio” trick. How do you run the sidechain in parallel? I can’t get my head around it. It seems that things would always be in series with two instances. Can someone smarter than me explain it?
@@DanWorrall oh wow. It’s hard for me to picture the signal flow. It’s really as simple as “two comps in series as inserts, then set second comp to external sidechain the original signal before it hits the first comp”? If so that’s awesome and I’m dense haha. Thank you for answering and thank you for the compressor tricks deep dive! Lots of stuff I’ve never thought to play with 🙏
@@DanWorrall I woke up this morning and the signal flow had clicked in my brain. A total “duh” moment, seemed obvious all of a sudden. Thank you for taking the time brother! 🙏
If I see a link in the description to the company to get itbrought, is this an adv video? From my experience this does nothing better others can do as well. Anyway this review from Dan is great as usual
Surprised you tested this before HCL Islander! I agree they really nailed the interface, but to me this doesn't sound much like a "classic" tube compressor. Not bad, but not the sound I'm after. (Same with HCL Islander!)
You can of course "hack" the dual mono to be sort of 50% linked by using external sidechain input. EDIT: Yeah, you basically did just that but for the M/S example.
Sure. The visualiser may be helpful if you're still getting to grips with compression as a concept. There are more versatile compressors however, if it's your first compressor purchase. The lack of a ratio control being my biggest concern here.
the generally worst thingy is the low fps update from the VU metering in all plugins.. that should be updated... I have also this needle clicking at the right side in mind when loudness was superior nice... back in the days..
Man I just love Dan, I wanna hire him but I don't know for what since we basically do the sama thing xDD. If I EVER create a plugin company I'll ask him to do the introduction lol
What are you actually listening for when adjusting compressor parameters? I tend to stop when it sounds good. However, there is zero science behind my decision .
Attack: snappiness or punchiness on drums, prominence / softness of consonants in a vocal, pick attack of guitar part. Release: distortion (if too fast), pumping, the way the ambience (if any) rides up, the general feel of a part: too fast a release can make it feel kind of annoying, too persistent and in your face; it can make bass parts feel 'sludgy' like wading through treacle. Too slow a release and the part will be too much in the background still, not firmly and consistently up front enough.
Very good, Worrall! Is that your track underneath, at the beginning? [edit: found it on Bandcamp via supplied link] Think I've heard it before, and loved it. Love when you surprise with synth-beautiful songs that deviate from your (mostly) guitar-style songs. Thanks, Dan, you old-school! (although I might be older, can't really tell your age except maybe from your raspy voice)
Hi Dan! Have you ever used Acustica stuff? I’d always passed it by because of the processor hit. But these days they are getting better on that front, and their character compression, saturation and preamps have been sounding great as well, an area where they used to be fair not great. Have been using a few of their classic unit packages for a year+, as well as some of the newer stuff like the custom gear made for Polygram in the 70s. Of course the big difference is that Acustica stuff is IR samples of the original gear. Essentially similar to visual ‘animation’, in that they are morphing through many different IRs in realtime, program-dependent. It’s been sounding good to me but i would be very curious to hear what you think about something like their vintage Neve bundle. Not ‘does it sound exactly like the original’ of course, because who cares, really. More, ‘is this adding something to a mix you couldn’t get with a regular algorithmic plugin?’ My personal answer is yes but i’d love to hear what your ears might say. Be well, sir
Digitally modelled analogue kit always seems to port across all of the limitations of the analogue interface into the digital plugin. Stepped pots and fixed frequencies might be a consequence of the analogue circuitry, but they're annoying and silly on a plugin GUI if the GUI lets you dial in numerical values exactly. It's a shame because this plugin sounds great.
For cases where people might complain about faithfulness of the hardware reproduction, devs should just charge 10 extra bucks for a premium hardware "plus" version. It could do all the same stuff as the original hardware but also provide some extra ergonomics that are more possible in software.
Has anyone else noticed that the GUI looks like a yellow-eyed monster with a square mouth and pointy teeth? Brrrr…Compressor’s going to eat me!😳… sorry… carry on!
This channel is like Planet Earth for audio engineers.
Perfect
The compressor plugin sips from the river as the saturation watches from the shadows, ready to pounce
David Audioborough
quite possibly the most educational channel on YT, if you really are interested into audio engineering. Reaching 100K subscribers soon!
Can't really say who can even compete with Worrall, although there are some fantastic content out there...
Mr Worrall always has some completely surprising new information and uses for the plugins he reviews. He is one of the very few whose videos I can rewatch and learn new things.
Came here to watch compressor review, leaving with lots compression tricks. Thanks, that was unexpected!
Duuuuuude, huge thanks for speaking about those images inside the vu meter !
It's kind of ridiculous that the maker of the hardware thought it was a good idea in the first place. What sort of weirdo would buy a hardware compressor because it's got a little drawing of a woman on the meter? I get my curves with EQ!
Thank you Dan! As always, this video is absolutely fantastic. Watched it 6 times now, it is so dense with pure information. Your channel is a University for mixing, learned so much from you. Forever grateful.
When you put the m/s comp on the main bus in paralleled side chain, that sounded awesome! It instantly made the track sound complete! Such a nice effect.
hOLy cRAp. This man did an in-depth plugin review and a game changing mix technique tutorial in ONE VIDEO!
2:25 if you toggle the little grey dots on top of the output meter it changes the controls to treshold, attack and release knobs btw..
Thanks, @Dan, for your broad yet concise introductory review of Process.Audio's "Rockruepel Comp.Two" plugin, and *also* for sharing your highly relevant additional tips, tricks, and insights. After viewing this video, I feel much better able to articulate my thoughts about *why* I liked this plugin after I took it for a spin myself earlier this past week.
I always look forward to your your concise video reviews, tutorials, demos, various opinions, etc. This, and all of your videos about products, techniques, thought processes, etc. that also interest me, but puzzle me in various ways, are extremely helpful.
18:59 just marking the absolute pearl of knowledge for future reference
Hi Dan, thank you for further expanding upon your answer to my question in your last video, as always your insight has been incredibly valuable, and I'm already experimenting with unlinking the stereo controls in my compressors in mix buses and in mastering stages to great effect.
Great video as always Dan. I bought the Comp.Two before even seeing your video with the plan to use it as a drum buss compressor, which was part of your conclusion. So that means watching all your previous videos have taught me enough to at least now be on the right track when analyzing new plugins. Only another 1,000 miles to go.....
So very much more than a plugin review. So many insights on all things compression. Trickery shows me how I need to think. Much more useful than just a critique. Thank you.
It's the first software varimu which feels like the real hardware. Great character and groove box!
have you tried the Magic Death Eye?
pulsar mu also
Dan calling for non-hegemonic representation right from jump. 👌👌👌
Hi Dan! First of all, thanks for your perspective and MS comp tips! I'm glad you're providing a UI/UX analysis of different plugins and I totally support you in your efforts to influence developers. I hope they will provide more useful stuff for us in the near future.
I'm also with you on the interchangeability of EQs. After watching your videos and others, I assume that the majority of emulation plugins are simply a combination of simpler modules within a unique UI. You often combine Saturn with Pro-Q and Pro-C in your examples in the same manner. Ultimately, I believe we can use a narrow set of instruments and replicate the sound of different plugins. It will just require more instances of simpler ones. And when you actually work the digital eq is the best bet for me.
So I wonder when a developer will create a modular EQ and compressor plugins with switchable character or circuitry emulation (such as saturation, stereo imaging, etc.) of beloved brands like Neve, SSL, Manley, while providing the same digital EQ section or compressors UI which also might switch algorithms (DMG Audio TrackComp 2). Notably, Kush split their AR-1 compressor and introduced a separate LG Drive. So inserting this kind of "character-only" plugin in a chain would also be an option, just like many mixers use channel strips plugins for analog sound emulation only. I understand that this way you sell fewer plugins. However, today, after 20+ years of digital audio, we should think of plugins not only as faithful emulations or new modern algorithms but also as problem solvers and time savers providing best possible UX.
My second point is that a plugin should resolve complicated routing and trickery for us, like compressing sides with the mid signal, as you mentioned. Wouldn't it be cool to have a Pro-C instance built into the sidechain of Pro-C itself? It's cool that they have Pro-Q in it, right? By the way, for compressors with non-fixed ratio settings, the multiplier parameter might be a great addition.
Recently, I revisited Jaycen Joshua's template and thought of the Rbass (Maxx Bass) plugin with built-in parallel compression/saturation and PS22, which probably replicates your comb filtering trick with a mono signal and its delayed copy.
A standard features should be volume-compensated drive/headroom, linked with key modifier input/output stages and threshold/makeup gain. In this regard, I think of your Shadow Hills Comp review every time I use it or try to set the Black Box by increasing saturation, triode, and pentode while decreasing output. Small midi controllers like Behringer X-Touch Mini are great for this.
Paradoxically, developers and mixers in the vintage days tried to improve and modify their gear only dreaming about our virtual tools and routing. Yet, now we're trying to limit our possibilities in the digital domain. So, I wouldn't mind having a UI aesthetically inspired by hardware but with rebuild digital interface and implemented tricks.
Melda MTurboEq is some of the way there
And TurboComp
Thanks for sharing the wonderful bus compression style, and a very thorough look at this nice little compressor. The Klanghelm MJUC does have ratio controls, so I'll give that a try for some bus compression. Rockruepel Comp Two looks like a nice unit. Rockruepel means Rockpunk one might say.
Thank you one more time for your amazingly clear review!
Great 👍🏻 All the features and functionality reminds me of Cubase’s stock compressor
Ha! If you think aliasing sounds analog .....and a major selling point of analog emulations is less tedious fiddling to get it to sound good for an application. Some of the really good ones actually get really close to sounding at 3d and silky as analog.... I don't of off a single stock compressor that does that.
Cubase is way behind in addressing digital artifacts. They haven't even acknowledged their existence yet. And I think very highly of Cubase.
I have never really heard ringing From nyquist foldback Distortion. Like someone will make a plug-in to replicate the decap aliasing in the future for that 2020 sound haha
Another great vid again Dan and as usual you've uncovered in-built quirks that other reviewers wouldn't even find with a big map and torch.
My lasting impression after listening to that drum loop for nearly 16 mins is that with Comp Two is that you have to PUSH IT, PUSH IT REAL GOOD!
The density of useful information in these videos..
Plugins like these remind me why I use Fabfilters C2 all the time.
1:52 I wasn't expecting that haha
i really like the sound of the comps doubled up ha. grabby!
would like to see/hear a review of Acustica Audio's El Rey 2.
Could you also take a look at the APU Loudness Compressor? The developer claims the compressor is based on how humans perceive loudness instead of being based around standard rms and peak parameters.
Reminds me of JB's PC-2 Psychoacoustic Comp from decades ago. I always thought that was a cool idea.
I see Dan, I click.
9:14 This is awesome tip. Love those drums pushed to the extremes.
UADx Capitol Mastering Compressor by Universal Audio-one of the few UAD plugins that is able to run natively, without any external DSP hardware-is a fantastic vari-mu hardware emulation, and it offers a ratio control (albeit a rather hidden one). I'd reccomend taking a look at it, it sounds great on my 2-busses and drum submixes.
I personally don't like how it sounds 😔 fairchild is better for me
yeah for 300 bucks lol.....? no way Jose....for 29.99 yes,,
transformer might be at the input and output stage so if both have the same level the difference of sound might be bigger when you compare on/off
For what it’s worth, I think my hardware variable gain compressor has similar quadratic gain reduction curve. Even though all my explorations of various manuals point out to curve gradually sunsetting into limiting. I’ll measure today.
I'm still learning my Shadow Hills Mastering Compressor (plugin), going to have to A/B this one with that. Thanks!
Hi Dan, I would love to see your take on the dynamic grading „compressor“ from Playfair audio. It’s seems pretty exotic and different from all the compressors I‘ve ever used. Maybe interesting for you as well?!
I think there's something wrong with the captions, they seem to all show at the beginning and don't show during the video. Could be on my end though.
Working for me. I think there's a bug, I've seen a couple of these comments recently. Try reloading the video?
@@DanWorrall Seems to be working ok today
will you be at gearfest in London this weekend?
No plans, which probably means no at this stage.
Hello, is there chance of review of the Abyss compressor?
Interested in trying this. I had the hardware box for many years. It was super snappy for a vari mu.
this makes me want to delve back into the compressor i made for the plugin i’m working on.
Worrall looking for the bi option explains a lot about this channel.
You could be the first for the new crave transient eq. That would be interesting. Thanks
Great demo, Dano...Not going to lie, I was a little surprised by hearing you use "the very musical" term that has been a bit of a cliche since the early gearslutz days imho. I remember first using a Speck Audio EQ that was alleged "not to be very musical" (w/e that means?) and it turned out to make the music I was working on sound quite lovely, almost ....musical.
My immediate first reaction is: did they really have to put pinups in the gauges?
I guess it's good that they at least let you disable it
Well, the original hardware has them. I suppose it is 2023 and all that, but you can’t fault them for authenticity
Thanks again Dan and I do appreciate as do many of the halo and click red is very nice
Can you do a video with basslane pro from tone project pls ?
The steeper curve lends this to drums. It's ca bit hard for bus duties imo.
Yayyyy new Dan! Alex Brits also has an amazing video on the hardware unit (and his channel is very worth checking out in general)
Any arguments towards feature limitations as a result of authenticity are moot, as I'm not aware of any real world Vari-Mu with a true wet/dry mix, I don't see how it would be possible irl.
Indeed the real world version of this unit doesn't either, so agreed on all fronts re-makeup and headroom etc.
No macOS Ventura support ? I don’t get it 🤦🏻♂️. Anyway…thanks to Dan for another epic review ✌️
Thanks Dan! And ooof those top tips
I'm still waiting for him to review Unisum and Kelvin by Tone Projects
What about the following trick? Get delta signal from the compressor and mix it with dry signal but with delta signal boosted a bit. This should increase the ratio.
i really wish i could send you my drawmer 1978, it seems exactly up your alley
I wish comps would just have the same setup as Digico comps have, I love the simplicity of them, then add all the other stuff on top.
What means "run them in series with sidechain in parallel "? @9:21
Two instances in series. The second instance has the original, uncompressed signal at its sidechain input. So both compressors have the same sidechain.
I kinda wish you would've pitch your voice down when playing with phase. A "Danth Vorrder" vocal sounds epic at natural pitch already :P Imagine a great "Star Wars" parody called "Audio Wars" with you saying "You don't know the power of the phase shift!"
recently tried this and the hcl islander.... i think sonically the islander is superior... but i love this one too
I love the islander, such a nice compressor
Hey Dan, try Patchwork from Blue Cats with this for the Mix knob effect plus for input and output drive functions. I love this plugin just for that when I need it. Hope that helps.
Revisiting 8 months later. Did the Developer address a single thing of the suggestions Dan had?
Um. The plugin hasn't notified me of an update. Don't know if it does that though. I haven't actively checked.
@@DanWorrall I did not expect to get an answer here and got the Demo.
No they have not changed anything.
I played around a bit. Nice sound overall but
Dunno. The lack of fine tuning of Attack and Release combined with the weird „graphics“ on the VU that remind me of car repair shops wall posters of the 80`s and the Restricted SC filter Frequencies make me give it a pass for now.
Loved the video once more though.
How did you link the settings in reaper? Ive seen a few different ways but i was wondering which one you were using.
Reaper's parameter linking.
You could make a video aboud why Destressor is so much liked. I know you mainly do VST. Just a 5 min talk would be nice.
Oh no, not objectification of women! LOL great video Dan, and I love this compressor
Wonder how this compares to the SPL iron
I knew things would get spicy when we got to the mid side knob 👍
You should sell a multi platform daw add on that allows the user to hover over stock plug knobs and get your quotes and notes to pop up in real time. I actually want dan worrall in a box 😊
Would be interesting to hear your thoughts on Tone Projects' 'Unisum' - It is a masterpiece (apart from HYGGE)
I’m lost on the first “increase effective ratio” trick. How do you run the sidechain in parallel? I can’t get my head around it. It seems that things would always be in series with two instances. Can someone smarter than me explain it?
The second compressor is listening to its external sidechain, which is the raw uncompressed signal, same as the input of the first compressor.
@@DanWorrall oh wow. It’s hard for me to picture the signal flow. It’s really as simple as “two comps in series as inserts, then set second comp to external sidechain the original signal before it hits the first comp”? If so that’s awesome and I’m dense haha. Thank you for answering and thank you for the compressor tricks deep dive! Lots of stuff I’ve never thought to play with 🙏
Yes it's that simple. Plus match the threshold, attack and release if you want to simply double the ratio.
@@DanWorrall I woke up this morning and the signal flow had clicked in my brain. A total “duh” moment, seemed obvious all of a sudden. Thank you for taking the time brother! 🙏
If I see a link in the description to the company to get itbrought, is this an adv video? From my experience this does nothing better others can do as well. Anyway this review from Dan is great as usual
I got a free license. Probably should have mentioned that. No money changed hands though, and it's not an affiliate link.
Surprised you tested this before HCL Islander! I agree they really nailed the interface, but to me this doesn't sound much like a "classic" tube compressor. Not bad, but not the sound I'm after. (Same with HCL Islander!)
You can of course "hack" the dual mono to be sort of 50% linked by using external sidechain input. EDIT: Yeah, you basically did just that but for the M/S example.
Oooo another squisher!
I LOVE SQUISHERS
LOLOL... i just coughed out some beer... you are hilariously witty
And yet… it sounds great.
Do you recommend it for amateurs?
Sure. The visualiser may be helpful if you're still getting to grips with compression as a concept. There are more versatile compressors however, if it's your first compressor purchase. The lack of a ratio control being my biggest concern here.
the generally worst thingy is the low fps update from the VU metering in all plugins.. that should be updated...
I have also this needle clicking at the right side in mind when loudness was superior nice... back in the days..
Man I just love Dan, I wanna hire him but I don't know for what since we basically do the sama thing xDD. If I EVER create a plugin company I'll ask him to do the introduction lol
What are you actually listening for when adjusting compressor parameters? I tend to stop when it sounds good. However, there is zero science behind my decision .
Attack: snappiness or punchiness on drums, prominence / softness of consonants in a vocal, pick attack of guitar part.
Release: distortion (if too fast), pumping, the way the ambience (if any) rides up, the general feel of a part: too fast a release can make it feel kind of annoying, too persistent and in your face; it can make bass parts feel 'sludgy' like wading through treacle. Too slow a release and the part will be too much in the background still, not firmly and consistently up front enough.
@@DanWorrall Thank you so much for the insight into this. I appreciate your time.
If a plugin is not reviewed by Mr Worrall, it does not exist.
Yay. You can't have too much Dan.
I like Magic Death Eye stereo better 😅
I hope the process audio guys and dolls take the feedback and make some shit happen.
"Rüpel" is the german term for "Bully" or "Lout".
DAN!
Very good, Worrall! Is that your track underneath, at the beginning?
[edit: found it on Bandcamp via supplied link]
Think I've heard it before, and loved it. Love when you surprise with synth-beautiful songs that deviate from your (mostly) guitar-style songs. Thanks, Dan, you old-school! (although I might be older, can't really tell your age except maybe from your raspy voice)
The required effort is a feature.
Hi Dan! Have you ever used Acustica stuff? I’d always passed it by because of the processor hit. But these days they are getting better on that front, and their character compression, saturation and preamps have been sounding great as well, an area where they used to be fair not great. Have been using a few of their classic unit packages for a year+, as well as some of the newer stuff like the custom gear made for Polygram in the 70s. Of course the big difference is that Acustica stuff is IR samples of the original gear. Essentially similar to visual ‘animation’, in that they are morphing through many different IRs in realtime, program-dependent.
It’s been sounding good to me but i would be very curious to hear what you think about something like their vintage Neve bundle. Not ‘does it sound exactly like the original’ of course, because who cares, really. More, ‘is this adding something to a mix you couldn’t get with a regular algorithmic plugin?’ My personal answer is yes but i’d love to hear what your ears might say.
Be well, sir
👍⚡
I had to dip out at 7 minutes. It just sounds like a compressor I'd never buy that misses in some big ways.
Digitally modelled analogue kit always seems to port across all of the limitations of the analogue interface into the digital plugin. Stepped pots and fixed frequencies might be a consequence of the analogue circuitry, but they're annoying and silly on a plugin GUI if the GUI lets you dial in numerical values exactly.
It's a shame because this plugin sounds great.
rüpel = ruepel = hooligan" or "ruffian"
Yes there's an audible difference between the logo, and the man/woman backgrounds...
Petition to get than mankini guy 😂
Plugin sounds great to me
nice :)
Another plugin that can make a mix sounds sweeter...butn that's all
For cases where people might complain about faithfulness of the hardware reproduction, devs should just charge 10 extra bucks for a premium hardware "plus" version. It could do all the same stuff as the original hardware but also provide some extra ergonomics that are more possible in software.
"Equal opportunity objectification" haha!
Has anyone else noticed that the GUI looks like a yellow-eyed monster with a square mouth and pointy teeth? Brrrr…Compressor’s going to eat me!😳… sorry… carry on!
True 😮
Angry robot goes brrrr.
Listening on my phone with 1 broken speaker. But I still don’t care
🤣🔥🔥🔥🫡
if i were a plugin developer, you'd be receiving a proposal from me to alpha and beta test my products. why aren't plugin manufacturers doing this?
2nd viewer!
Well, I was the first, so...
@@DanWorrall ye, so pretty good ha?