Why would you do this Well, why not There are countless times when being able to see what your audio waveform looks like could be useful. You can use it to visually monitor audio wave forms. Smartelectronix - Ambience is a pretty good algo verb s(M)exoscope is an oscilloscope VST plugin. PSP vintage meter - extremely accurate vintage style VU that can be setup on your master buss for Bob katz's K-metering.įree G - another high quality metering plugĪudio Damage - free compressor and fuzz plug-ins Roger Nichols Inspector - spectrum analyzerĭigital fishphones - This guys free stuff was so good it got him a job designng plugs for Samplitude Voxengo freebies - R8 brain and Span in particular These are donation-ware EQ's that can be had for as little as $1. Here's some mac compatible plugs and suites to check out.ĭDMF IIeq pro and LP10. There are a bunch that give the expensive plugs a serious run for the money. I am quite familiar with the MANY hi quality PC freebies and the argument that free vst's are crap is ridiculous. I appreciate though it probably looks tiny on a large monitor. Sorry to say, but I think you might have just duplicated effort.
The module icons from Plogue Bidule (below, left column) best illustrate the differences between the two. I usually do my music production on my laptop so I made it small intentionally for myself. Dozius wrote:There was a lot of work done on Github at the beginning of the summer.Smexoscope was ported to the latest VST SDK and 圆4 in the beginning of June.
I just did a big search for mac freebies for a friend. There are two versions of the oscilloscope: s(M)exoscope is the standard insert effect version, good to use in any VST host, and s(M)exoscopeModular, optimized especially for modular VST hosts like Plogue Bidule or AudioMulch.