However that means it usually isn t ideal to go across all tracks.
Abbey road vinyl vs j37.
This is the more sophisticated of the two plugins there are more options for altering the sound including three different tape formulation flavors fig.
The ac202 from mcdsp goes in the complete opposite direction of the first two plugins on our list offering a whole slew of options to sculpt the sound to your taste.
The waves abbey road vinyl plugin lets you choose between the sound of a pure acetate lacquer cut or the print master vinyl pressing from the factory.
However depending on your application that doesn t necessarily mean the j37 is better than the kramer master tape.
Color wise the j37 is much more transparent imparting bluish greens to the sound.
The j37 tape is once again a fruit of the collaboration between waves and abbey road studios.
It s the modeling of a four track j37 tape recorder manufactured by swiss company studer.
J37 the j37 is superior to the kramer in the sense of true high end tape emulation though again both are useful depending on the application.
The abbey road collection includes plugin models of the studios famed redd and tg12345 consoles as well as rs56 passive eq the curve bender j37 tape reel adt the king s microphones abbey road s echo chambers and reverb plates and the one of a kind vinyl plugin which models abbey road s vinyl cutting and playback gear.
Abbey road j37 tape.
Abbey road vinyl includes the full signal chain as found in the studio s mastering room.
Find out what he thinks in this extended video review.
This multitrack recorder was used in the famous studios during the second half of the 60s and the early 70s.
We re rebooting snake oil with this review of the abbey road vinyl plugin by waves.
The signal path starts on the left with a model of the tg 12410 transfer desk this imparts the sound of the solid state electronics.
Russ takes a look at the waves abbey road j37 tape emulation plug in.
In comparison the kramer is the go to if you intentionally want to sound like you recorded to tape.
There are models of the various gear and controls to tweak and fine tune the analog contribution of the emulations.
It appeals more to a hands on approach for those who want the option of tweaking the sound until it fits perfectly to the source.
Waves promises to simulate the sound of a vinyl record with this.