On electric guitar, we found that clean sounds could come across as sounding a bit too artificial, particularly at higher width settings.
Above that, the 80 and 100Hz settings work really well, making bx_stereomaker very good indeed at adding width and space to backbeats. With snares and claps, we had no flamming issues other than at the lowest Tone settings (20 and 40Hz). Here, the Mono Frequency filter comes in handy, particularly with higher Stereo Expansion settings. But in that case, you can still add width in the higher frequencies. Moving on to a kick drum and the lower Tone settings can introduce flamming to the sound if the transient is particularly sharp. Switching to a mono synth bass, we found the effect worked best applied to the upper mid frequencies. bx_stereomaker works really well on this sort of sound, applying a lovely thickening effect when lower frequency Tone settings are used.Įven so, the width enhancement isn't predictable, and by switching through adjacent settings you can quickly move from lots of extra width to not much at all. Our first port of call for testing is an electric bass.
bx_console N – emulation of the famous British N Series console.
bx_cleansweep Pro – low and high pass filter with new technology “Anti Crush Technology”.pedal bx_boom – allows you to adjust (attenuate or boost) the bass drum sound.bx_bluechorus2 – emulation of the Boss CE-2 Chorus.bx_blackdist2 – emulation of a pedal of 2 thousand ProCo Sound RTM iconic recordings.bx_bassdude – Virtual simulator of guitar amplifier Fender Bassman.bx_2098 EQ – virtual equalizer bx_2098 EQ ($ 249), simulator of hardware model Amek 9098.Our goal is sonic excellence and a perfect sound experience for every single user. We value the work of our plugin developers and the creators of the original hardware units we emulate. Passion drives us to push audio technology forward every day. Brainworx Audio stands for finest audio engineering Made in Germany.