from the editors of and
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from the editors of and
FROM THE EDITORS OF AND SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS WARNING: The use of these plug-ins maybe illegal in some countries. Spl-Izer™ Detailer™ 3 band 24db per octave FIR frequency splitter that allows the three bands to be isolated and routed to aux or instrument tracks for separate processing. This is the ultimate stereo mastering tool and final mix plug-in for a DAW’s master fader. Magically, it increases the clarity in a mix while still allowing increased loudness. Uniquel-Izer™ Frequal-Izer™ Why work within the confines of an EQ configuration? This plug-in lets you determine your ideal EQ. And if you ever need more bands or filters, they’re just a click away. This plug-in builds a complex FIR (Finite Impulse Response) filter to your specifications. Draw and edit your own EQ curves. Inspector XL™ A collection of six individual, powerful audio analysis tools designed to fulfill a number of familiar analysis tasks with professionalism, style and finesse. Dynam-Izer™ Uniquel-IzerLE™ Why always apply the same compression to all audio levels? This plug-in lets you break your audio levels up into zones so you can control them exactly how you want. Uniquel-izer LE uses the same advanced algorithms as its big brother Uniquel-izer, but with a fixed number of 7 filters. Finis™ This plug-in employs the most advanced limiting algorithms we know of. Great Tools don’t need to have complicated user interfaces. There’s nothing else to do after Finis. www.RogerNicholsDigital.com phone 727.230-1603 RND™, DETAILER™, DYNAM-IZER™, FREQUAL-IZER™, UNIQUEL-IZER™, SPL-IZER™, PRO BUNDLE™ and SIGNATURE BUNDLE™ are trademarks of Roger Nichols Digital, Inc. All other trademarks and registered trademarks remain the property of their respective owners. Design ©2006 RND SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS PUBLISHER MARGARET SEKELSKY msekelsky@nbmedia.com EDITORIAL FRANK WELLS EDITOR 615-848-1769, fwells@nbmedia.com FRED GOODMAN MANAGING EDITOR 212-378-0423, fgoodman@nbmedia.com CHRISTOPHER WALSH, JANICE BROWN ASSOCIATE EDITORS ADVERTISING TARA PRESTON ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER 212-378-0456, tpreston@nbmedia.com MATT RUBENSTEIN NATIONAL SALES MANAGER, PRO AUDIO REVIEW/AUDIO MEDIA 914-524-5045, mrubenstein@nbmedia.com KAREN GODGART ADVERTISING DIRECTOR 323-868-5416, kgodgart@nbmedia.com JENNIFER MAGSANAY MARKETING & SALES COORDINATOR 212-378-0467, jmagsanay@nbmedia.com ART & PRODUCTION NICOLE COBBAN SENIOR ART DIRECTOR ANNMARIE LASCALA ART DIRECTOR FRED VEGA PRODUCTION MANAGER NEWBAY MEDIA L.L.C. STEVEN PALM PRESIDENT/CEO ADAM GOLDSTEIN GROUP PUBLISHING DIRECTOR PAUL MASTRONARDI CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER TONY SAVONA DIRECTOR OF EDITORIAL, MARKETING AND CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT ADMINISTRATIVE, ADVERTISING, & EDITORIAL OFFICES 810 7th Avenue, 27th Floor New York, New York 10019 TEL: 212-378-0400 ■ FAX: 212-378-0470 E-MAIL: pro@nbmedia.com COPYRIGHT ©2007 NEWBAY MEDIA All Rights Reserved. Reproduction without permission is prohibited. Software Essentials is published by NewBay Media L.L.C. All product information is subject to change; publisher assumes no responsibility for such change. All listed model numbers and product names are manufacturers’ registered trademark. The publisher does not take responsibility for any of the products advertised within. TABLE OF CONTENTS Software: The New Hardware . . . . . . . 4 Crane Song Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Peterson Tuners’ StroboSoft 2.0 . . . . 7 Steinberg Nuendo 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Glyph: Reliability And Support. . . . . 11 PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. Minnetonka Audio Software . . . . . . . 12 SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS| 3 SOFTWARE: Hardware The New BY JANICE BROWN Whether migrating from hardware to software tools, or integrating the best analog-and-digital hybrid system in their studio, producer/engineers with their sights set on optimization keep a close eye on software development. The digital audio workstation is in a constant state of upgrade, and software tools—whether used exclusively or alongside analog equipment—make working “in the box” a more appealing proposition with every new version update. With ever-unfolding developments in software platforms, plug-ins and peripherals, engineers can accomplish more in less studio time than ever, an essential matter for lower-budget projects, yet increasingly important across the board. From major platform releases such as Steinberg Nuendo 4 and Pro Tools 7.4, to new plug-in processors aimed at the high-end, high-performance DAW from software devel- Bob Power 4| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS opers like Waves, McDSP and Sonnox, Universal Audio, Roger Nichols Digital and SSL, the software market has brought significantly increased flexibility, power and efficiency in workflow to producer/engineers in the last year. Peripherals mentioned in this magazine, such as Minnetonka’s AWE batch processing tool, Glyph’s latest-generation GT 062 two-drive tabletop hard drive and Peterson’s StroboSoft, a software strobe tuner now available as an AU/VST plug-in, bring added capability to the desktop. NYC-based producer/engineer Bob Power (A Tribe Called Quest, Erykah Badu, Pharoah Monch) upgraded his workstation recently with Pro Tools 7.4, Logic 8, McDSP and Sonnox plug-ins and the Crane Song Phoenix plug-in. Power, one of a cross-section of mixers surveyed about the transition to in-thebox mixing, cites the McDSP compressor bank, Sonnox dynamics and limiter plugins, and Bomb Factory 1176 and Waves plug-ins as instrumental in his work. “I picked up the mantle of becoming a better ITB mixer several years ago, mostly as a natural progression, and looking at the reality of technology and art,” Power shares. “By now, much of my work is primarily ITB, although I have a very high-end stereo bus analog chain. When I do mix analog, I get it pretty far along digitally first, and then take it over to analog.” For Power, transitioning into the box is about much more than cutting corners in terms of budget. “I can work on several mixes at the same time, and I stay fresher and more objective on them,” he says of ITB mixing. “Also, my monitoring at my mix room is so Jason Goldst ein stable, so my work is much more consistent.” On the latest additions to his rig, Power notes, “Both the Sonnox Limiter and the McDSP ML series limiters are new to me and both are amazing in their own way. I find that you can use pieces like these on things other than the mix bus: big vocals, funky guitars, etc.” Another NYC-based engineer, Jason Goldstein, mixer of Beyonce’s B-Day, The Roots’ Game Theory, and various cuts off the latest Jill Scott album, has recently begun mixing 100 percent of his projects in the box. Goldstein’s transition occurred gradually, as he identified plug-ins that could perform in the place of his choice outboard gear. “I started with de-essers, then as the plug-ins got better, I simply started trying them on mixes and using them more and more,” Goldstein explains. In the past year, Goldstein has added the final key plug-ins to his rig to (continued on page 6) www.cranesong.com715.398.3627 ADVERTORIAL Crane Song Phoenix Crane Song is known for making high-quality analog hardware and converters with choices of color that are musically pleasing. STC-8, the compressor, followed by HEDD, the A/D and D/A converter with tube and tape color emulation, started the revolution of making hardware with the flexibility to have color choices in a given piece of equipment. HEDD 192, which does tube and tape emulation in the digital domain, is the forerunner of Phoenix. Phoenix is a suite of TDM plug-ins designed to emulate the unique properties of a magnetic tape machine. Designer Dave Hill has crafted this software with the same attention to detail he used to create the electronics for ATR Service’s much-heralded “Aria” discrete tape electronics. His intimate knowledge of analog electronics, as well as decades of experience as a recording engi- neer, has spawned a very useful, musical suite of plug-ins. The Phoenix process not only incorporates the nonlinear saturation characteristics created by the magnetic tape itself, but also includes the interrelation of an analog tape recorder’s record/reproduce electronics and equalization curves. The Phoenix suite is not merely a downscaled version of the Crane Song HEDD processor, but a ground-up application derived from HEDD technology, and specifically engineered and optimized for Digidesign’s TDM architecture. Phoenix’s five different TDM plug-ins emulate different tape characteristics, each one incorporating a color change button allowing three choices to modify the process. The Gold button is the position where the color is approximately flat in frequency response, with Sapphire being a brighter, and Opal being a warmer tonality. A level control determines the amount of the Phoenix process integrated into the audio signal, and an input trim determines “how hard you hit the tape.” Because the DSP process is level-dependent, reducing the input level will also cause a change in sound. Phoenix is very DSP-efficient—approximately 20 instances of the plug-in are possible on a single DSP chip. Phoenix will run on MIX, HD and VENUE, with all current operating systems and computer types that support Pro Tools in a TDM environment. Tony Shepperd ( continued from page 4 ) complete his full migration into the digital realm. “I’ve added URS (Unique Recording Software) EQs for vibe, Sonnox plug-ins for precision and ADSR (Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release) shaping, TC Electronic for reverb, and Sound Toys for harmonizing, delay, etc.,” he shares. In terms of the corresponding outboard gear, Goldstein notes that the Sonnox Trans Mod plug-in works as his SPL Transient Designer, the TC VSS3 plug-in as his TC M4000 and the URS Fulltec EQ stands in for the Manley Massive Passive. He also mentions the latest plug-in to make the cut: “The Massey [L2000] Limiter is amazing sounding, and allows me to give clients louder mixes without distortion.” Like Power, Goldstein identifies multiple benefits to mixing in the box: “The repeatability of settings, instant recall of mix, and ability to move from one song to another and back throughout the day without recalls—this helps to minimize ‘mixers block’ and tunnel vision in mixing,” Goldstein points out. Los Angeles-based engineer Tony Shepperd (Whitney Houston, Cheetah Girls, Kenny Loggins) has been mixing 100 percent in the box for several years. “I actually prefer it over mixing on a console,” he says. “I find ITB mixing more creative and a lot more fun. Sonically, since I have been working ITB 6| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS for seven years, I have learned how to get the big console sound out of Pro Tools.” Over the past year, Shepperd has upgraded his system with Pro Tools 7.4, and several new plug-ins including the Massey L2007 Limiter, Digidesign’s Structure sampler and McDSP’s Emerald bundle, which includes the CompressorBank and Revolver convolution reverb along with several other plug-ins. Shepperd also added Crane Song’s Phoenix, a suite of TDM plug-ins that emulate the properties of a magnetic tape machine, Overloud’s Breverb, and Source Elements’ Source Connect Pro, a plug-in that enables audio connections between digital audio systems anywhere in the world, allowing directto-the-timeline recording via internet connection. With a system so frequently evolving with new plug-ins and updates, Shepperd’s workflow evolves as well. “Source Connect Live and Source Connect Pro have permanently changed the way I work,” Shepperd notes, as an example. “Essentially, when I’m done mixing in the box, I bring up Source Live and I stream the mix in a MP4 at 320k live to the clients. It comes straight off the Pro Tools mix bus. Last month, I had an A&R executive from Disney and the producers of the song listening to the mix all at the same time. I made a threeway call and everyone could not only hear the mix at the same time, but we could put the song to bed without hav- ing to burn the song, upload the song, and wait for feedback.” Shepperd calls the new Breverb algorithmic reverb his favorite most recently discovered plug-in. “It reminds me of a 480L,” he shares. “Breverb runs in RTAS mode, and I love the details in the amount of parameters—it’s sonically outstanding.” At Red Rock Recording, in Pennsylvania’s Pocono Mountains, producer/ engineer Kent Heckman (Phil Woods, Benjy King, Galactic) has been mixing totally inside of Pro Tools as well. “I am generally mixing what I’ve recorded myself,” he explains, “so I have it sounding how I want it to sound from the start. I do any analog compression and EQ’ing in the recording stage. From the basic tracks to the final overdub, I am thinking and working on the mix.” Heckman’s go-to plug-ins include Audio Ease AltiVerb, Sound Toys’ Echo Boys and Massey plug-ins. “I use AltiVerb for room sounds and Echo Boy for delays,” Heckman explains. “For EQs, I mainly use the Sony Oxford GML or URS API plug-ins. I don’t use much compression in Pro Tools, but if I do, it’s the Massey CT4. If the project doesn’t go to a mastering engineer, I will hit it with the Massey L2007 Mastering Limiter.” Heckman’s software essentials help save his clients valuable time. “This year (continued on page 10) www.petersontuners.com/strobosoft708.388.3311 ADVERTORIAL Peterson Tuners’ StroboSoft 2.0 Since its release in mid-2005, StroboSoft users have ranged from professional studios to high-profile backline techs to bedroom producers when they have required precision tuning software. While the standalone version has held its own, the natural progression towards a plug-in was inevitable. That being said, StroboSoft 2.0 (available in January 2008) adds the long-awaited VST/AU support as well as a few exclusive features not found in other software or even hardware tuners. StroboSoft 2.0 also adds a tap tune feature that can be used while tap tuning woods for instrument construction. StroboSoft 2.0 takes a sample of the most dominant frequency and loops it automatically for ease of measurement. The tap tune feature can also be employed as an assist while tuning percussion instruments due to its “Average Taps” function that takes an average of user selected hits and displays the note/octave reading. A pitch graph is also included in this release that visually displays the duration of the played note in real time with its note/octave location. The graph can be par- ticularly useful when used by students trying to improve their vocal intonation or those practicing embouchure with woodwind/brass instruments. A user can set the graph to auto-scroll during a performance and measure their effectiveness at the end of a session or just measure a portion. The strobe display can also be resized in this version, allowing a user to maximize the display pattern for easy viewing across a classroom, studio or stage. A simple click breaks the strobe display away from the rest of the interface to allow repositioning and custom sizing. A new mini-mode reduces the amount of screen real estate the program takes up as well, making it easier to have multiple instances open at the same time. StroboSoft 2.0 will be a free upgrade to Suite (boxed) users. There will be an upgrade path available to download version users at a minimal fee. Please visit: www.petersontuners.com/strobosoft for more details on pricing and availability. www.steinberg.net714.522.9011 ADVERTORIAL Steinberg Nuendo 4 New Advanced Audio and Post Production System with innovations and dedicated new features for audio post, studio production and live recording “Nuendo 4 empowers audio professionals by elevating both creativity and productivity to new heights,” comments Steinberg’s general manager Andreas Stelling. “The new functionality accelerates and enhances workflows by increasing efficiency and speed, retrieves and searches media offering probably the most valuable com- files across any connected drive. modity in today’s deadline-driven world: Utilizing intelligent database tech- more time. And because Nuendo 4 caters nology, user-definable tags and other fea- audio post, and features special options to directly to audio post and studio production, tures, MediaBay allows instant pulling up remove unwanted noises from audio materi- Steinberg is now in the unique position of and filtering of search results, smart file al, for example from location recording. being able to offer dedicated products for management and much more. Flexible new recording and routing four different target groups: Nuendo for the Nuendo 4 sees a vastly upgraded set of options offer creative new ways to route and post and pro audio community, Cubase for 38 new first-class surround and side-chain- manipulate audio, with any track now able to musicians, producers, ing capable VST3 audio effect plug-ins that record audio from any summing object such WaveLab for audio editors and mastering cover dynamics, spatial FX and filtering for as groups or FX returns. Common recording engineers, and Sequel for entry-level music almost any situation. Standard on each configurations such as stems and print mas- creation enthusiasts.” channel is a brand new VST3 Channel EQ, ter recording are now extremely easy to set Among the new functionality in Nuendo 4 with an audio quality that can replace many up, obviating the need to route audio outside is a state-of-the-art new automation system expensive additional third-party EQ plug-ins. the system for recording on external on par with the world’s best. Preview mode, Drag and drop and copy/paste for plug-ins recorders. Fill commands, Punch Logs, Virgin Terri- make using plug-ins in Nuendo 4 even faster tories and the unique new Touch Collect and more efficient. composers and NUENDO EXPANSION KIT: CUBASE MUSIC TOOLS FOR NUENDO 4 Assistant are only some of the new functions Nuendo 4 offers a range of features which unite the best functionality found on designed specifically to accelerate and Together with the launch of Nuendo 4, traditional hardware mixing consoles with enhance workflows in audio post production. Steinberg also introduces an additional the flexibility inherent in Nuendo 4 as a mod- Advanced post pro editing commands allow product: Nuendo Expansion Kit: Cubase ern DAW environment. even faster editing workflows, including Music Tools for Nuendo 4 (NEK). This add- The new MediaBay file management sys- many new options to move, place and trim on module to Nuendo 4 contains optional tem for audio, video and other media files audio faster and with outstanding precision music compositional functionality, including can replace many external FX database to save valuable time. The highly flexible full Cubase scoring and notation, the solutions. MediaBay browses, archives, Post Filter is engineered specifically for Cubase MIDI Drum Editor, four integrated VST instruments as well as support for the MusicXML standard. Nuendo 4 is compatible with Windows XP, Windows Vista and both Intel and PPC-based Macintosh computers running Mac OS10.4. 8| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS New automation system New Plug-in set New routing and recording engine New MediaBay and editing commands It’s About Time Anyone who works in post knows the constant pressure to get more work done under tighter and tighter deadlines. At Steinberg, we know that every extra key stroke and edit move adds up, costing both time and money. That’s why Nuendo 4 has been specifically tailored to audio post professionals and gives you back something priceless: time to be creative. The ultra-smooth workflow built around a brand new routing and recording engine includes stunning new native processing tools specifically designed to streamline repetitive tasks and free you up to try new things. Nuendo 4 lets you work faster, be more creative and still deliver on schedule, no matter how crazy the deadline. It’s about time. Nuendo has grown through a dedication to the post community, which is fantastic. The rethinking of the automation has been incredible, especially the Write-To-Punch feature, which is an extremely powerful tool for our type of work. Nuendo is absolutely world-class at this point. John Ross, Sound Supervisor and Re-Recording Mixer Steinberg is a registered trademark of Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH. Yamaha Corporation of America is the exclusive distributor for Steinberg in the United States. ©2007 Yamaha Corporation of America. All rights reserved. Mitch Dane ( continued from page 6 ) I recorded Nellie McKay’s third album, Obligatory Villagers, which involved lots of vocals, horns, percussion and strings, and we were constantly working on the sound throughout,” he offers. “At the end of the project she asked me, ‘Do we have to mix?’ And I said, ‘How does it sound now?’ We never had a ‘mixing session’ on the whole project. I love working this way and can’t imagine doing it any other way.” Producer/engineer Steve Bishir (Whiskey Falls, Amy Grant) recently produced and recorded/mixed a DVD project for Amy Grant completely inside Steinberg Nuendo. Like Heckman, Bishir notes, “I love the instant repeatability of software and how it sort of smears the line between recording and mixing. If I am recording a project I am going to mix, then I am always looking ahead with plug-ins. Nuendo allows me to use high-latency plug-ins at all times without having to worry about timing issues.” Bishir mentions his Waves Diamond bundle, TC reverbs, UAD card and onboard Nuendo plug-ins at the top of his “essentials” list, noting, “I love the Steinberg Magneto plug-in and the Nuendo noise removal plug-in. The Magneto is one of the best at analog saturation emulations that I’ve used.” The time-saving factor of mixing in the box has more and more engineers working on at least portions of their projects this way, or a percentage of the albums they work on in a year. Nashville-based producer/engineer Mitch Dane (Jars of Clay, Bebo Norman) recently added a vintage Neve 8014 console to his Sputnik Studio, but relies on software tools for much of his work. “I mix about half of my projects in the box, mostly out of convenience,” he reports. “When I can, I’ll stem out to my console. Even while in the box, however, I use some outboard equipment to supplement.” The fully integrated hybrid studio blends the best of vintage and modern analog equipment with the high-performance DAW, a production scenario in which software tools are, perhaps, no less essential at the mix stage. Says Dane, “I use the Line 6 Echo Farm plug-in a lot in mixing, 10| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS though when I track, I still use my Echoplex or two Space Echos; I also use the SansAmp a lot.” As for recently added tools to his software arsenal, Dane mentions, “The SoundToys’ plugins are amazing—EchoBoy, Tremolator, and FilterFreak are very versatile and sound amazing. I use the FilterFreak to muck up a keyboard pad or guitar, and the Tremolator is very cool on drums.” NYC-based producer/engineer Geoff Sanoff (Michael Stipe, The Secret Machines, A Camp) also mixes about half of his projects in the box, and uses analog processing where possible. “In the past year, I have added the latest UAD plug-ins, including the LA-3 and Helios 69EQ, the Neve 1073/1081EQ’s and 33609 Compressor as well as their Precision Maximizer,” Sanoff shares. “I also recently purchased the Brainworx BX-Control, which is an M/S encoder/ decoder that allows you to tweak the stereo field of your mixes.” Sanoff also entered the world of VST plug-ins this year, introducing a VSTRTAS wrapper to his Pro Tools HD system. “There are so many oddball free plugins that people make on their own that you can use to add specialized color to your mixes,” Sanoff says, “It reminds me of the way people collect guitar pedals for mixing. You can’t use them on everything, but they do help add a unique flavor here and there. And that is a huge improvement in my mind from where we were 5+ years ago where it seemed like everybody had the same set of plug-ins.” Producer/engineers working on the Steinberg Nuendo platform have native access to that wide world of VST plugins. Steinberg debuted version 4 of its Nuendo workstation at the AES Convention in October, an update that incorporates new VST3 surround effects plug-ins, routing and recording enhancements, an advanced automation system and the new MediaBay file management system. A dedicated Nuendo user, producer/engineer Chuck Ainlay (Mark Knopfler, Vince Gill, George Strait) calls some of his software tools invaluable, though he still mixes on the SSL 9000 J console that is the centerpiece of his room at SoundStage Studios in Nashville. “Perhaps it’s just a matter of comfort from years of developing the techniques I use, but I find that I can achieve a larger, more expansive mix using a traditional style of mixing,” Ainlay comments. That said, Ainlay allows, “With Steinberg’s capacity to time-align analog (continued on page 14) Geoff Sanoff www.glyphtech.com800.335.0345 ADVERTORIAL Glyph: Reliability And Support Glyph opened its doors in 1993 just as early DAWs, requiring fast, dedicated storage solutions, were gaining a foothold in the analog recording world. We answered that need by providing rock-solid, rackmountable and hot-swappable storage subsystems with features aimed directly at the pro audio market. Along with building extremely durable products, we were successful by providing the most comprehensive service and support policy in the business: a 24-hour Advance Replacement program with 48-hour turnaround time on inhouse repairs. Our mission has changed little since we started: Service and support is still our number one goal. We offer three-year warranties on all GT Series products while our competitors offer one or two years. Our Overnight Advance Replacement policy on GT 050, GT 050Q, GT 062 and GT Keys guarantees that if your drive fails in the first year of its warranty, we’ll send you a replacement drive overnight, for FREE. We also offer FREE basic Data Recovery in the first two years of warranty. Using one or more software applications, we are able to retrieve data with a very high success rate. We can’t guarantee that we’ll get your data back, but we’ll give it our best attempt, for FREE. Most drive vendors simply erase returned drives because they don’t want to be held responsible for the data. If you have valuable data on a Glyph drive being sent in for repair, we make securing your data our first concern. Our newest product, the GT 062 offers additional ways to keep your data safe with RAID 1 mirroring technology. RAID 1 offers data redundancy and real-time backup by writing the same data to the two internal hard drives at the same time. Should a drive failure happen, data is still on the remaining drive. Our attitude is like yours—your art is what matters the most. You want your gear to “just work,” so that you can concentrate on your project. We feel the same way, and we’re not satisfied until our products are good enough that we’d want to own and use them ourselves. The Glyph GT Series. Running at FireWire 800. New FireWire 800 versions of the GT Key, GT 051, and GT 103 include everything you’ve come to expect in the GT Series, but are updated to use Oxford’s 924 chip which bridges the faster FW800 bus to the latest Seagate SATA drive mechanisms. In an audio environment, this boils down to more tracks per drive, more edits per track, less spreading tracks across multiple drives, and fewer headaches trying to reassemble sessions from multiple drives. Store in a cool place.. GT Series FW800 GT Key, GT 051, and GT 103 Seagate SATA drives with NCQ Oxford 924 chipset 15-20% faster than FW400 versions Interchangeable with FW400 versions 3-Year Warranties 2-Year Free Basic Data Recovery 1-Year Overnight Advance Replacement 800-335-0345 glyphtech.com www.minnetonkaaudio.com952.449.6481 ADVERTORIAL Minnetonka Audio Software Minnetonka Audio Software, Inc. is a company of musicians and engineers with a passion for music and quality. From the SurCode™ product line of surround encoders to the discWelder™ family of DVD-Audio authoring tools, our products are in use by top professionals all over the world for video, broadcast, games and CD/DVD production. Experience and interaction with our clients clearly demonstrates that Digital Audio Workstations were inherently designed for the creation of content. Processing, conversion, transcoding, encoding and authoring have either been added as afterthoughts or not at all. That’s why we created AudioTools™ AWE. AudioTools AWE is the automated audio workflow engine for editing, format conversion, encoding, plug-in processing and processing through external I/O devices. Processing chains can be auditioned and saved as templates. Advanced job management features include Hot Folders, a Job Queue that manages any number of sequential jobs, robust failure recovery, and job logs. Batch Processing is not enough. Doing the same inefficient process to a large number of files in a batch mode can automate the step, but still leaves room for improvement. Like much of today’s technology, innovation is less about new ways of performing individual tasks, and more about maximizing time, resources, and quality. In audio production, many individual tasks can already be solved in many ways, but these steps often lack innovation. In addition, managing audio content efficiently and effectively is a growing problem among media organizations large and small. For audio producers and users, the challenge centers on managing the growth of digital audio assets through the pipeline of editing, processing, versioning, collaboration, distribution and archiving. How can AWE solve these problems? How can AWE maximize your time? • Mastering: If you are a mastering engineer creating Redbook CDs from high-resolution audio (24-bit/192 kHz), you might add EQ then a multiband compressor—a brickwall limiter then normalize—output to aiff—downsample to 44.1 kHz and dither to 16-bit; then send that output through AWE to generate MP3s for reference and publication to the Web. • Game Audio: If you were processing voiceover audio for games, you might want to 12| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS process the audio through a VST EQ—then a reverb—then a compressor—then a samplerate converter, before finally encoding the files in Dolby Pro Logic II. You might have as many as 50,000 files in a complex directory structure. With AWE, you can process the entire 50,000 in one job automatically, unattended while maintaining the directory structure and placing them in a FTP directory for delivery. • Film or Jingles: If you were doing a job in film or working on jingles, you might want to drop time trim to make all the files the same length; then concatenate the files to insert a 2-pop at the head of each file. Next, add a file name modifier to add the date to each file processed. Then, sample-rate convert and or change the output to aiff and output the files to a specific directory. • DVD: If you author DVD-Videos, you would need to encode audio with Dolby Digital. AudioTools AWE will allow you to set up one job and Dolby Digital-encode 20 DVDs or more without any additional intervention. Our Hot Folders watch for and process audio as it appears. AWE will do all of these things automatically. Think about it. Work smarter. AWE is the essential DAW extension. The choice is clear. AudioTools AWE will save you countless hours of processing time and free up your workstation. AudioTools—AWE. The essential DAW extension. Automate your workflow. DAW AWE Hot Folder Auto Processing External Processor VST Plugin Support DAW AWE Hot Folder Auto Processing mp3 Encoding mp3 DAW AWE Hot Folder Auto Processing SurCode Encoders AC3 PLII DTS Do More. Bill More. Make More. “From high resolution sample rate conversion to simply cutting mp3’s, AWE’s unique ability to drop a file in a hot folder saves me lots of setup time. I can focus on my work while having the confidence that the Bob Boyd files are being processed in the background exactly as I want them to be.” Ambient Digital, Houston WAVE AIFF Minnetonka Audio Software 17113 Minnetonka Blvd., Suite 300 Minnetonka, MN 55345 U.S.A. Phone: 1-952-449-6481 Fax: 1-952-449-0318 www.MinnnetonkaAudio.com MASI-Sales@MinnnetonkaAudio.com Allen Morgan ( continued from page 10 ) insert paths and Nuendo 4’s new automation and routing functionality, I’m sure with time I’d be able to develop techniques to mix in the box and feel that I’ve not sacrificed the integrity of the project.” Ainlay’s AMD-powered PC running Cubase/Nuendo 4 is loaded with Waves, Antares, PSP, URS, Universal Audiopowered plug-ins, SSL Duende and the recently added Focusrite Liquid mix. Ainlay uses a combination of outboard equipment and plug-ins following this typical breakdown: “Most all of my reverb is outboard, but I’ll occasionally use the UA plate and Wave IR-1 plug-in reverbs for ‘real’ type spaces. EQ is most often done in the analog domain, but on occasion I’ll use the SSL EQ from Duende and Waves, Pultec EQ from UA and some of the unique EQ from Liquid mix. Compression plug-ins that I lean on include the Waves Lin MB, Renaissance DeEsser and L2, UA Fairchild and LA 2A. PSP, URS, SSL Duende, Focusrite and Steinberg also have some great compression plug-ins that I go to from time to time.” The most recent additions to Ainlay’s rig are the Waves GTR processor bundle and the Focusrite Liquid mix. “I’ve found great uses for both,” he adds. Another Nuendo user, producer/engineer Allen Morgan (Dolly Chuck Ainlay (left) r with Mark Knopfle 14| SOFTWARE ESSENTIALS Parton, Steve Virginia, Nine Inch Nails; www.allenmorganaudio. com), also recently added the Focusrite Liquid Mix to his system. “By far, the biggest advancement for EQ and compression in my rig has come with the addition of the Liquid Mix,” says Morgan, who works between Nashville and Los Angeles on a mobile Nuendo rig. “Not only do I love the emulations, but I appreciate the fact that it is portable and can be used on several different computers. Since it operates on its own DSP, it also allows me the luxury of more processing power for other processor-intense plug-ins. The idea of having 20 EQs and 40 compressors literally at your fingertips is amazing. Not only is this good for the engineer but the artist as well, if the budget doesn’t allow for a large-format console or studio with tons of outboard gear.” Morgan also runs Ableton Live on his laptop, replacing any exter- nal sequencers and samplers from his mobile production rig. “I have been running Live through ReWire straight to Nuendo for a Dolly Parton project I am producing, and it works great,” he reports. “All the sequenced tracks in Live pipe straight into Nuendo, which contains all the live instrumentation and vocals.” Live is helpful in Morgan’s production and remixing work, where he also notes soft synths and amp modeling tools have been huge. “I especially like the M-Audio virtual synths and signal processing plug-ins such as Izotope Trash,” Morgan adds. “Some of my favorite plug-ins, whether for a vocal, guitar, synth or really anything, are the IK Multimedia AmpliTube plug-ins. I am currently producing a great, innovative country artist, Steve Virginia. Some of the music has called for a Mellotron, filter effects, heavy distortion, etc. and I have been using MAudio’s M-Tron, Tascam GigaStudio for strings and AmpliTube/Trash for all the amp modeling.” Though Morgan prefers to keep the dance and hip-hop projects he takes on in the box, he’s ready to employ a broader arsenal of equipment when possible. “I just finished a project for an Australian artist, Shereen, at Henson Recording in Los Angeles,” Morgan shares. “I used a laptop Nuendo system running 24 channels through an RME Digiface straight through an SSL 9000 then printed back to Pro Tools and MasterLink simultaneously. This was really the best of both worlds—the advancements of both software and computer hardware developers has allowed us engineers and producers to do things we once dreamed of doing.” Software is replacing studio-essential processors and allowing new functionality like acoustical testing and fundamental studio tools like tuners to be ensconced in a personal computer. Hardware isn’t gone completely, but now new hardware concerns come into focus, like audio-productionfriendly hard drives and computers. For the core of audio production, software is indeed the new hardware. ■ NewBay Media is the new communications company formed from properties formerly owned by CMP Entertainment Media and the Technology & Learning division of CMP Technology. These entities truly represent the best of both worlds — proven, established, market-leading brands combined with an innovative, responsive company culture that is focused on customer service and value. 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