The Score Magazine March 2020 issue | Seite 47

Slate Digital Infinity EQ Plug-in PULSAR SMASHER CALL OF THE RAW AND GRITTY SOUNDS! Pulsar is a new kid on the audio plugin market. They have one other plugin which is the Mu com-pressor and we reviewed that one very shortly before. It's one of our absolute favorites. The smasher is their new offering and is free for a limited period!! It's a custom modification of the 1176 compressor circuit, a twist on the famous all buttons in mode. It can add thickness and grit to any drum or bass track, or completely crush a bus, producing an aggressive sound It is is very easy to use the plug-in with an input, output and mix knob. That's it! The compression style can only be described in one word - Aggressive. They say the modeling technology guaran-tees a perfect emulation of the original device’s behavior. From the saturation of the magnetic flux in the inductors to the precise response of the transistors, to the effects of tiny calibration de-fects, everything is perfectly reproduced. While we don't have a real 1176 to test it out, it does sound amazing for what it does. It's ideal for raising the level of ambiances in a drum bus, but al-so for adding presence to vocals or warming up guitars or basses. It does not treat vocals with too much love unless your intent is some extreme leveling/parallel saturation. The Mix knob of the Smasher allows precise adjustment of how much thickness you want to add to your sound. Pulsar Smasher consumes as few system resources as possible – despite the complex algo-rithms at work. Smasher takes full advantage of modern CPUs to do more with less. But if your computer can stand it and you enjoy making it suffer, you can always turn oversampling on, pro-cessing at rates up to 384kHz! Its a really fun bit of kit to have and its currently free! Grab is ASAP! ONE STOP SHOP! Another tool in the arsenal of slate digital! It's a 24-band graphical EQ aims at the modern engi-neer who wants to work fast and get great results. It claims to be optimized for mouse control and touchscreen surfaces, with compact control groups for the ultimate economy of motion. It looks fairly straightforward, although the interface looks slick and modern. Its control groups are truly unique. It allows you to chain multiple bands together and have them behave with each oth-er. This allows for quite a unique and interesting workflow and in some cases, allows for some pretty unique EQ moves. The EQ itself is extremely transparent no matter if you use it for subtle carving or dramatic tonal transformation. And, with continuously shapeable slopes, simultaneous cut and boost, and powerful Mid/Side and Left/Right processing, the Slate Digital Infinity EQ is extremely versatile. They stress a lot on the workflow of this EQ. Its intuitive interface is laid out to minimize mouse movements, with tight groupings for related functions and no right- click drop-down menus. Dou-ble-click on any point to create one of up to 24 filter bands, and use the sliders that hover above or below the band to shape the slope and adjust the Q. For pinpoint listening, you can click the headphone icon to solo a band. And, the Infinity EQ lets you affect multiple bands simultaneously by selecting and linking band groups. Paired with automation, the tone-shaping possibilities of the Infinity EQ are endless. On the sound front - there’s zero-latency analog matching and it sounds good even as you push quite a bit with no brittle highs or flabby lows. They’ve included a slew of helpful presets to speed up your process and inspire creative tone-crafting. This EQ is quite interesting and we are quite intrigued to see how it fits within the workflow of dif-ferent engineers. Digital EQ’s are seen as a purely functional tool and its hard to switch from the ones that an engineer is truly used to. This plugin could very well take its spot, especially be- cause it comes included if you already have the Slate All Access Pass. If you think about it, it's quite a sweet deal!. The Score Magazine highonscore.com 45