I almost never comment on a video, but I have to this time. Please do not stop with the in depth videos. The algorithm might be telling you to, but the producers likely disagree. I literally cannot think of another channel on youtube that describes how plugin works to such an extent as this channel does, and therefore provides the same quality of learning. One of a kind channel.
@Userminusone9 ай бұрын
Personally I don’t think Dan Worrall will stop making those in-depth kind of videos, as he’s said before that he loves geeking out about plugins. I think his comment about the reception of his last video was more of a relief that he doesn’t have to worry about making lower-effort videos than normal while he still feels like crap from Crohn’s Disease before starting medication for it, not an acknowledgment that he should exclusively make lower-effort videos from here on out. Dan, if you’re reading this, I also hope that someday you will make more detailed videos breaking down plugins and other audio concepts, but if you decide not to, I will respect that decision, and I wish you well as you start your medication to help with living with Crohn’s Disease.
@samuliauno81639 ай бұрын
I just thought he was sarcastic about the low-effort part.
@cbrooks09059 ай бұрын
I don't know what video he's talking about, but I have to agree with the "algorithms". While I love that Dan has this vast knowledge I get lost and my mind wanders trying to listen to his in depth content. Add his hypnotic voice to it and all bets are off. I just can't focus. This video, however, I stayed with him the whole time. I think he would do well to tone it down a bit, maybe even dumb it down a bit. That's just my opinion though.
@PalaceofVision8 ай бұрын
Hate, bitterness and negativity is what drives KZbin and most social media. Sad but true.
@djse9 ай бұрын
I think people who think "analog mojo" will fix their bad mix don't realise that a lot of bad music/mix/mastering was made exclusively using analog gear. We just only remember the good music and become nostalgic of that.
@CarlyonProduction9 ай бұрын
Or how much of a pain in the ass it was to work on, say, tape?!
@UnfortunatelyTheHunger9 ай бұрын
Yeah, in my experience, audiophiles who obsess over analog gear, tend to have extremely reactionary tastes in music, unwilling to entertain the validity of the creative output of younger generations. It's an emotional attitude, driven by anger over no longer being young, taking their frustration on whoever they can get away with feeling powerful over
@legacyShredder19 ай бұрын
@@UnfortunatelyTheHunger I own a truckload of analog hardware and plenty of plugins. I want to hear more about my emotional attitude and anger, and how I take that out on plugin users.
@Arcessitor9 ай бұрын
@@legacyShredder1 I know reading comprehension is hard, but 'tend to' indicates an average. As in, not all. Complicated stuff, I know.
@legacyShredder19 ай бұрын
@@Arcessitor The point. You missed it.
@bobrv89 ай бұрын
The voice of reason and with a tongue planted in the cheek. Entertaining, educating and thought provoking.
@ProductionAdvice9 ай бұрын
^^ This !
@detuneCris9 ай бұрын
Dan yapping while still teaching is something I'm absolutely up for.
@damianoakes25929 ай бұрын
I think what anolog modeled channel strips do for me is almost a mental thing, where it puts me in the mindset of working on a console. So instead of wondering what to load on each individual thing, you just put the same channel strip on everything and go, avoiding the mire of options. Also, the limitations are good for avoiding amateur mistakes, where instead of contorting the sound with 15 bands of fully parametric EQ, you got 3 or 4 bands to work with, which you quickly learn is completely sufficient 99% of the time. And if you're working with stepped frequencies and a preset Q-factor, well that's just straight-up idiotproof, which is great for me.
@AJOrpheo8 ай бұрын
Yup! It’s a great place to start. And once I feel like I can’t get a certain sound out of my comp or eq on my Focusrite plugin in, I’ll try putting on something cleaner on (dynamic le from ozone 10 is my go to stand alone comp, similar to the fabfilter proMB and that normally gets my sound where it needs to be. No magic fixes. just tools that I learned in and out!
@bugglebegger1435 ай бұрын
I fully agree. I've recently become a strong believer in channel strip plugs as a mixing approach. I put them on everything and just that practice alone is a giant step into being a vastly superior producer (of course, you have to actually mix on it, not just slap it on).
@martmakesmusic9 ай бұрын
I honestly just like the layout of those kinds of plugins more. If i need to dig deep i will use EQs or Compressors that allow me to do that, but in all the other instances i like those old looking ones. They force you to listen instead of looking at a live graph of the entire frequency spectrum and i like that
@Nethanieal9 ай бұрын
To many plugins out there 99.9% of these plugins are like SPAM they do not do anything but distract me. Thanks for all the work you do Dan !
@UncleWalter19 ай бұрын
4:18 Honestly that's pretty much the main reason I use the more skeuomorphic plugins and the emulations a lot of the time. A lot of the more modern complicated plugins just make me tweak and mess around a lot rather than mix.
@Mikey__R9 ай бұрын
Skeuomorphism has its place, but I think it still needs to be applied with thought and moderation. Compressors and EQs are normally fine; guitar amp emulations annoy me though, where they allow you to tweek the knobs of the channel you're not currently playing through whilst wondering why the EQ isn't having any effect on the tone.
@GalenHeffermanMusic3 ай бұрын
or developers can take the goodhertz philosophy that are designed for digital convenience with simplicity built in…
@bugglebegger1435 ай бұрын
I for one stand by my channel strips plugins. They are so very functional and make mixing more enjoyable for me. Some of them have a nice sound as well that I may be imagining, but when used across an entire mix (SSL for instance) I do feel like there is some X-factor in the sound. All the mixes I have used them on have been better, but that might just be because they're basically the only mixes where I take care to compress and EQ every single track. I might try another approach. But it also helps that the Brainworx SSL are VERY low CPU rather than using specific EQ and compressor on every track. I can only use like 5-6 UAD plugs before things get rough.
@bjulin9 ай бұрын
I found out how much "magic" they pack into their plugins when I took a closer look at one of the brainworx consoles (I forgot which one it was because I didn't buy it). It had a "sheen" knob. When activated, the sound experience was much brighter and clearer. When I examined the thing with the doctor, I realized that they had already built in a lowpass filter when loading the plugin. With the premise of analog warmth, this was acceptable to the ears. If you then activate "Sheen", this lowpass filter is deactivated. Ultimately, the "Sheen" button was simply a return to the normal digital sound. What made the difference was my premise of what makes the sound 'analog' and what makes the sound 'digital', nothing else.
@mycosys9 ай бұрын
Thats not what i've seen reviewers testing it say sheen does on those console plugs, it radically changed the EQ
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
Iirc sheen changes the shelf frequency or the bell width. You're correct that it's not magic.
@stayinspired20279 ай бұрын
Cool you should just buy more analog gear
@GeorgeLocke9 ай бұрын
@@stayinspired2027Also buy me a taco, please.
@mithramusic5909Ай бұрын
Your videos have two great angles: in depth, detailed knowledge, and a more subtle peek into a mindset that takes a lifetime to develop. Keep doing the high effort videos, but the low effort ones still contain knowledge. The knowledge is useful in ways you don't even realize.
@malagente67779 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing your knowledge and thoughts with us, Dan! It's always a pleasure watching your videos
@schrodingerschrodinger9 ай бұрын
I gave up my subscription for one of the ssl plugins bundles as I couldn't hear a difference. Firstly I think you need really good speakers, audio interface, etc just to hear these subtle analogue sounds. Secondly we add all of these subtle effects then someone plays the finished mix through their phone. They will definitely not hear any of it. Thanks for the great video!
@NovianLeVanMusic9 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for a video about a console/channel strip (other than Amek 9099)! Excited to watch this, Dan never fails to deliver. EDIT: This was not what I expected. Although it is a great video, I expected some sort of in depth walkthrough of at least the channel strip in the thumbnail, similar to your Amek 9099 video.
@noisytim9 ай бұрын
Thing is that even your “low effort” is still either reassuring and/or insightfull. Which puts you above many other “audio youtubers”.
@isaacbugalho9 ай бұрын
6:30 DAWs are in fact more powerful than any studio mixer from the 90's, but many mixes now are also on another level, not possible in the 90's, nevermind 80's or 70's. That being said, I agree equipment is not an excuse for a bad mix nowadays. Get well soon, Dan!!!!!
@artysanmobile4 ай бұрын
How are mixes “on another level?” I have always mixed to the voice in my head and I’ll admit that voice goes to some very strange places. It did this in 1970, 1980, 1990, and well… you get the picture. The hard part has always been the imagination, the scoring, the picture. In 1970, I used ridiculous means to render my dreams; tape loops across the room, modified pianos, using edit mode to hand-fly samples from my MCI servo controlled machines, cutting tape like a jigsaw puzzle. Today, it’s a whole lot easier to put that together but dreaming it up takes the same amount of time and effort. Nothing was impossible then, same as now.
@MaashuCookiemonster9 ай бұрын
SO glad to see you're back Dan! I cannot express how much I learn from your videos and how much I enjoy your presentation style and the thought that goes into everything you do.
@Peter01869 ай бұрын
What do you think about airwindows plugins , especially Consoles ?
@altarec1237 ай бұрын
Before the airwindows consolidated projet I would've just advise to not really touch on it. Wayyyyyyyy to many plugins, some (if not most) of them straight useless for the majority of people, some really great and a handful that are just straight up witchcraft. Now that we have a plugin with all airwindows plugin inside it with embedded documentation and a dedicated recommended section it's way more accessible than it was before. The XYZ Filter series is incredible, Pockey2 is one of the most musical bitcrusher around, the K series of reverb shouldn't be free. If Chris only made ToTape6 I'll still consider him one of the greatest DSP coders of all time. Tube2 is such a joy, ect ect ect. For me tho, console is such a pain to setup and use that I juste never uses is.
@muyeikasamurabi16029 ай бұрын
I think it is more about the feel of the workflow. Yes, we can EQ match until the cows come home but then sometimes it's more about getting to know what to expect from each "flavour" and the context for when to use it. If you learned on hardware, there is something inherently comforting in the GUIs. All that said, I love how the FabFilter suite pretty much covers the bet from end to end between ProQ3, Saturn, ProC2, and Volcano if you are looking for a nice "channel strip" sound. The caveat being your ability to put it all together
@greenloungerecording93628 ай бұрын
Another great video Dan. A country should be judged on how it treats its most poor and marginalised, not how many tax dodging billionaires it has. Health care is a basic human right, which should be equally available to all citizens, irrespective of how much money you have. Take care.
@MikeOxmellsGrimm9 ай бұрын
I love how well compressed and gated your voice is on these. Really fits the theme of what you talk about 🤣
@hocusjumbo80639 ай бұрын
I got a bunch of "vintage" compressors from Waves for next to no money a few years back and I love them. The limited functionality of the vintage emulations compared to a modern plugin really helped me develop my ear for compression because I could just drop them in to a track, compare the results against each other, pick which one I liked best and tweak from there. So I agree, whether a plugin is "better" comes down to workflow and ease of use rather than whether said plugin can "do" something another plugin can.
@tyjuarez4 ай бұрын
a lot of plugins are really just cosmetic -- eye candy for customizing the gui of your production environment. That's not a bad thing, I do love the stock limiter in Audacity where I do my mastering, but I will admit that Pro-L lays out the info in a much more intuitive way.
@thomassag9 ай бұрын
These short "low effort" videos are great! Thank you, Dan!
@bingoflangeworthy9 ай бұрын
Absolutely. That Pedal Show do short [Effector Du Jour] videos that involve a seven minute investment of my time. They don't delve into every single ounce of detail like their hour--long episodes, but they sure are accessible.
@BlondPanda9 ай бұрын
Always excited to see your videos in my subscription feed, they're incredibly well made videos (even these low effort ones) that have given me some super useful insight into the actual technical aspects of audio. In retrospect, I don't know how I managed to work with sound for so long without even knowing what oversampling does or what phase means.
@TroubadourMusic9 ай бұрын
Love your videos, Dan. Thanks for another great perspective. And I've never had to live under socialism, and never had to wait for treatment of any disease, and I am a cancer survivor and heart disease patient. This is one of my favorite channels. I wish you all the best with the highest respect, you and your family.
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
Are the roads and schools all privately owned in your country? No? You do live with socialism then, you just don't call it that.
@TroubadourMusic9 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall Taxes and roads aren't socialism. There is a specific definition of that. I do thank the Everything, however, that people do pull together for the good of many systems of life and society. Everything is far from perfect and never will be. I do not have very many answers to very many things, myself. :)
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
@GregoryStephenSchumacher socialism means public ownership, so yes that includes schools and roads.
@TroubadourMusic9 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall It does not mean public ownership. And I repeat, I've had serious medical issues and never once in my life did I have to wait for treatment or doctors in the US. I'd rather talk about music than politics. I'm not comfortable arguing with someone that is way smarter than me, but in this case you're wrong. But listen, let's just stop. Much love and well wishes. Seriously. You're welcome to remove my first comment if you wish.
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
@@TroubadourMusic millions of people in the US get no health care at all. That's a wait time of infinity. If you included those people in the figures your average wait time in the US would be... Infinity years. Literally. And you guys pay more than twice as much as we do for your healthcare, as a percentage of GDP.
@lucasadlhoch8 ай бұрын
While I do think that with increasing computing power, the „analog“ aspects or nonlinearities will be more in-depth, your video had a great take on it! Anyway IMHO the „realness“ always has to come from the recording. Where you put that mic and how much room you let bleed in will always make it more interesting than what channelstrip you used. Really enjoyed your style and arguments! Absolutely subscribed!
@cgsmithinnola9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, Dan, for all the many videos that help make us all better!
@chicnwafflesband9 ай бұрын
I love how you make each point pertinent and meaningful Dan ... Carry on with these great fire side chats!
@brokko_le39 ай бұрын
I am a sucker for aesthetics when it comes to plugins. I have always wondered if I truly like music, or just playing with all the knobs and levers like some mad scientist. I've got a few channelstrip plugins, but they never seem to do for me what separate "boring" plugins easily achieve. Except for one: the IK plugin rack which I got for cheap, although it doesn't really count because it's not so much a console but a seperate fx strip with predefined choices.
@Leo9ine9 ай бұрын
Babe wake up, new Dan Worrall just dropped
@zekebeukes73809 ай бұрын
Appreciate seeing your videos in my feed. Thank you Dan. You are very insightful
@KarltonCoffinBand9 ай бұрын
Love the approach. Well said!
@dusklightmusic3 ай бұрын
really nice reminder about the wonder of mixing, thanks!
@scope_creep9 ай бұрын
If you know what yor are doing, you can get very good mixing resulst with stock plugins, if not - third party plugins don't help at all. And btw. one of my favourite bands is Guided By Voices. Most of their early tracks are recorded on 2 or 4 tracks. It is the song that matters most. Good luck with your treatment, hope you are getting well soon. ❤️
@dabanjo9 ай бұрын
GBV is my fave as well. I actually use them to put things in perspective quite often. The "mixing" and quality of the recording is second to a great song. The lo fi sound of something like Bee Thousand doesn't need any special mixing or mastering to sound awesome.
@flanger0019 ай бұрын
I have learned three things from you, Mr. Dan: 1. Use your ears before you use your eyes 2. Saturation is magical 3. A plug-in should help you get better sounds faster I like the way the AMEK 9099 plug-in works, and I feel like I understand it 1000x better after your video, but my choice to use that plug-in is strictly because I like how fast I can get good sounds out of it. It's not giving me any sound that I couldn't get by individually creating each component of it and I would not be doing your teaching justice by pretending otherwise! I am super glad you are on the mend my dulcet-voiced internet friend! Power to Labour!
@fasti89939 ай бұрын
I still own a Behringer Composer, which was also my first compressor. Back when it came out, it was a game changer because it was much cheaper than anything else on the market and not sooo bad
@Byron101_6 ай бұрын
The vast majority of audio engineers who have used this analog technology at that times are grateful that these analog days with all its pitfalls and problems are over. Nuff said.
@YuriKovalyov7 ай бұрын
I would eagerly listen to your podcasts even being unprepared because it's a rare thing to hear a sober human speaking nowadays
@MACRONOne9 ай бұрын
Dan Worral is doing Snake Oil videos? I'm here for it!
@eugenefullstack76139 ай бұрын
I absolutely love my Neve and SSL channel strips on UAD2, but the DSP offload movement in general does seem permeated by misinformation and misplaced hype. I honestly just love how they sound and the fact they don't hog my CPU.
@PalaceofVision8 ай бұрын
By a mile the very best example of British understated ‘scathing’ review technique on KZbin. Factually accurate, well researched and brutal in their honesty. Dan is awesome.
@dimapoliakov9 ай бұрын
Title of the video I've been waiting for, but I probably expected different content. Two things. 1. Questions Let's set aside design and ergonomics. Here are my questions. What should we model in terms of sound? Is there anything else we cannot model yet? Is hardware behavior static or frequency-dependent (possibly due to capacitor bandwidth)? i.e. Does the mathematical algorithm describing the compression or eq curve of the device always remain the same? How different can channel strip plugins be and what distinguishes them from each other? Why do some possibly sound "better and more realistic" than others? What is the difference between an algorithmic plugin and an impulse plugin (Acustica Audio)? 2. My experience I've had both cheap and expensive hardware channel strips. I noticed that I always prefer a digital equalizer in the DAW. Cheap compressors are bad. Mid-range and expensive compressors process the signal in a way that I cannot achieve with plugins. With hardware, it's quick and "like on recordings". Several times I tried using a channel strip as external processing to enrich the sound (hybrid mixing) and didn't notice any magical results on a single track or mix, except for signal degradation in some cases, usually losing top and bottom frequencies. Preamp quality is very important. Therefore, for me the best combination is a good preamp, tracking compressor, and the rest with plugins.
@jiszlai9 ай бұрын
I wish you the best and I want to thank you for your awesome videos, I learned a lot from you!
@Sycraft9 ай бұрын
It cannot be overstated enough your comment about the "accessibility to the masses" and how amazing that is. When I first started playing with sound as a teenager, I didn't have access to a studio, just my PC and what I could get cheaply/free... and it sucked. The difference between what I had and what the pros had was just massive. Even if I was extremely skilled (I'm not) there was no way I could achieve professional results with the tools I could have. Now? It's the same stuff. I can, and do, have the same DAW, same reverbs, same compressor, etc that actual pros use, despite just being a hobbyist. It is so awesome that the barriers have been lowered as they have.
@worshipforfreedom56829 ай бұрын
Nice one Dan. As much as I love your in depth analysis I don’t always have time to watch the whole thing in a busy day, so this low budget, short and sweet approach is great for a few minutes of downtime, keep em coming! But health first, all the best with that 👍
@elreyabeja45393 ай бұрын
"If my younger self from the 90s could see how powerful my setup is now, my mind would be blown." 100%! If you didn't live through it, you probably can't grasp the enormity of how far we have come. Back in the 90s, I'd have to spend $5000 to get a sampler setup that can do half of what a free sampler plugin can do now. It's simply - almost indescribably - incredible.
@timhartnell24729 ай бұрын
You hit the nail on the head. 'If you enjoy it'... and if I enjoy it, i'll be more creative, and if im more creative, I'll end up with better mixes. So anything that you think is cool.... is cool! Regardless of whether it has code or knobs!
@rumikallenbach9 ай бұрын
You’re the best, Dan. As a fellow Reaper user, your analysis has been among the most useful I’ve encountered in my mixing “career”. Always looking forward to the next video!
@roanman74097 ай бұрын
What if I were to get a white left handed Strat and play it upside down?
@DanWorrall7 ай бұрын
Won't work but do it anyway
@roanman74097 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall Damn!!!
@thevi_olin9 ай бұрын
The s-es trigger right green bar … can’t unsee and unhear. And I really enjoyed this quality talk! Thanks Dan and hope you feel better soon!
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
100Hz on the left up to 8k on the right, RMS amplitude levels.
@KozmykJ9 ай бұрын
Behringer Composers - My mate was very disappointed with his. Marked lack of Bass frequencies, while I had a PA rack full of them and no problems. Turned out that, for a length of time, the factory in China had run out of the specified components and had been substituting 'near equivalents', hence the problem with the frequency response. Mine were of an earlier vintage and had no such problems.
@sylvaind90869 ай бұрын
I always love your no-nonsense philosophical analyses to these matters. - Glad the system took care of you. Hope you are well.
@jimimaze9 ай бұрын
I do love the post 2006 plugins. Man, they emulate millions of dollars of $ in the 80s. And I'm Canadian and love my social net, though it is a challenge to maintain.
@Stormsurf0019 ай бұрын
Great Video Dan and I'm so happy you finally are getting treatment. Being sick is no fun to say the least. Get better soon!
@250f5.69 ай бұрын
Dan always helps me see the path to good music, sound and creativity.
@LeapingDodo9 ай бұрын
It's not the low effort'ness that is liked. It's the more personal approach and more direct expression of your expertise that we have come to know and love over time. Regardless, keep it up!
@marksaxon8 ай бұрын
The plugin purchasing addiction is real for me but if I am looking for something new, I'm really looking at function over whether something truly recreates something I have never touched with my hands or heard with my ears. The AMEK 200 Console strip is my case in point. Not the venerable SSL 4K that all engineers universally love but the AMEK console works for me. After purchasing so many strips in the hopes of hearing something "magical", the AMEK has something I enjoy working with. Love your videos and the technical breakdown but also appreciate the opinions as well!
@accidentaldrummer9 ай бұрын
Came for the level-headed audio analysis, stayed for the level-headed political analysis
@roogrey9 ай бұрын
Spot on, Dan; especially your closing comments. I played my first gig in ‘92 when the music industry was a very different place to be. The labels held sway, most doors were shut, and producing a pro-level recording independently was cost prohibitive. Fast forward to now and I would say that there has never been a better time to be getting into music. Professional gear at a fraction of the prices of yesteryear, and everything one needs to get out there and heard at one’s fingertips. ‘Kids today’ have no idea how blessed they are. 😂 Thanks for being one of those providing quality teaching and advice amongst the noise. I recommend you often. Have a superb day.
@JamesJones-th3ml9 ай бұрын
Learned a long time ago that you can't fix it if it's bad enough. It always has to sound good to start with on recordings, so I never use channel strips to "Fix" a mix. I do however use them for a bit of sauce... I like the Eqs for guitar sometimes or piano... Even got some vocals to sweeten up a bit last night. I use the Lindal Audio 50 and 80 from Plugin Alliance. Just something about adding just a bit of harmonic distortion to guitars that really helps. They have oversampling built in so that's good, seems to help.
@CT-ho6si9 ай бұрын
I love all the vids. Definitely up for more "low effort" short-form videos! Glad you're feeling a bit better, and hope you keep heading in that direction!
@DoubleDoubleU9 ай бұрын
Sarcasm or not. Please don't let your videos lose quality. The profound tests and information you provide accompanied by your great style of explaining things is what makes your videos so great. Get well soon!
@DomSigalas9 ай бұрын
Well said Dan. As always ❤️
@kernelpickle9 ай бұрын
I’ve always treated any “analog”or “modeled” plugins less like the magical secret sauce I’m missing, and more of an interesting way of understanding/simulating one aspect of what it might be like to use the stuff that was used back in the day, because the limitations of their functionality was a feature not a bug. In a world with limitless options and possibilities, my ADHD can easily cripple my ability to make decisions, because I’m overwhelmed and overloaded. When I have a limited set of options I’m much less anxious about making the right decision because I can reasonably evaluate which one of those choices I think is best in that moment. Another thing that’s helpful, is that learning how some of this legendary equipment functioned and sounded often makes understanding what was being discussed by legendary producers in interviews about their work. If someone says the vocals were just run through an SSL and given a couple dB boost to the highs and then compressed by an LA2A with an aggressive setting. If you have no idea what any of that shit is, it’s not helpful. Once you have access to even a cheap sounding digital clone of that stuff, you might see that you were applying way too many plugins and over doing things because your DAW had a vocal preset that loaded a handful of plugins you might want for a particular task, which you might mistake as being needed, when some of them might not. So, you can use less or sometimes you hear a couple of dB boost and think it’s subtle when you don’t know the gear and later when you try the plugin version that “couple of dB” using the knob of that console was actually really dramatic because it had a much wider Q and was boosting way more than an actual 2 dB, because the old stuff wasn’t accurately labeled as to what it was doing. Once you’ve learned how those guys got the sounds they did, the interviews actually have more value because you can begin to understand “why” they did what they did, and once you know what the sound you should be shooting for is, then you can use other tools to get there if you want or maybe find something different that you like better. When you’re working with a bunch of plugins and DAWs that could be wildly different, if you still have plugins available that emulate classic gear, you can probably get a mix a lot faster than learning everything about the new DAW you’re working on for that day, because you’re familiar with what those things did and can imagine how that particular plugin might change the sound before applying it. I’m sure that guys who worked in the analog world appreciate the skeuomorphic GUI that resembles the familiar tools of their trade, which is a benefit we don’t have as younger folks who’ve only ever worked in the box. If you try applying similar settings in any generic multi-band EQ plugin that comes stock with a DAW, they all behave a little differently and if you’re listening in a different room on different monitors and their spectrum analyzer displays things differently than what you’re used to, there’s nothing to anchor your perspective because everything is always relative, and when you try out a plugin version of analog gear, because that’s the only thing you’re familiar with, you can probably recalibrate your understanding of what’s different and how it relates. Maybe you’re finally mixing in a room that doesn’t suck, and you’re not used to things sounding good immediately, because you’ve figured out how to compensate for that. If you know your speakers have shitty bass response, so a little boominess is fine because when you take that mix and play it back on other systems it sounds perfect-you might have problems if you’re in a mixing environment that doesn’t do that-but if you typically give the bass a few dB cut using an SSL, and this “better” (or at least different) monitor setup needs a big boost to that same knob, that’s when your ears can’t be trusted because your inner calibration is off. That might make you give a listen to your other mixes that were good on that setup, and you find that it sounds way different than you remember it sounding at home, so you apply the cut to the track and even though it’s way differently than it would sound at home you can hear it sound much closer to the reference mix and you only need to adjust that same knob similarly to what you would have expected. I only mention that potentially useful scenario where nothing else is anchored to what you’re familiar with, because emulating gear is ubiquitous and when there was an objective comparison to make with real-world equipment, most plugins get pretty damn close. So, it could be helpful. Especially if you mix on speakers that sound good by default because they’re designed to compliment the sound like consumer stereo equipment does, but maybe with more precision. Some people like mixing on speakers that exaggerate the worst of every mix, so that when get things sounding less nasty on it, it sounds amazing on everything else. Yamaha NS-10 are a thing for a reason. If you’re used to working for a long session, and know that by the end your ears will be tired and everything is going to be way to boosted in the highs, and you tend to boost the bass a bit much because it sounds good on your headphones, but then becomes overwhelming when played on consumer stereos that already have a smile EQ curve, I sometimes throw an exaggerated EQ on the master bus, so that I start out with those frequencies sounding hyped up from the beginning of a session, so I won’t keep adding to them as my ears tire out, and by the end that mix might sounds flat and even to my ears, but the next day with fresh ears it will sound like the garbage I intended and then once I remove that intentionally bad EQ curve, it’s a lot better and much closer to being right. I find that can help me jam as much work into one day than I would’ve otherwise been able to, and rather than making that all a waste and having to start over the next day. You can continue from where you left off much easier. Anyway, to bring it all back around, I think it’s useful to impose limits that will bring out your creativity to solve for those things and for all of these digital things to be tethered to some sort of objective reality. The folks who are long dead that came up with that old gear were just doing whatever worked at the time, and by it become almost standardized across the industry as every studio copied one another to stay competitive and appeal to the best producers who wanted certain things-that’s not a bad thing to have when software developers could re-imagine a GUI that could look like literally anything and when every DAW approaches things so differently and it’s not as easy for producers and mixers to compare notes when they work in different DAWs, using analog emulations can simplify things a bit so less is lost in translation. I imagine that’s one of the reasons that crazy expensive Waves plugins that are arguably no better than stock plugins became so widely adopted. It’s not necessarily because they were the best, or even easiest to use, but they probably provided a bunch of things Pro-Tools had been lacking back in the day, and by being compatible with everything, it probably made life as a traveling producer or mix engineer easier, because it was the familiar thing in every studio, along with the faders and panning knobs. There’s a reason that nobody has designed a 3D interface for mixing, which might be better-it’s because moving things around on an X, Y and Z axis isn’t possible with actual faders and knobs-but maybe with AR/VR stuff being popular, someone might come up with a paradigm shift where you’re literally moving things around your head in 3D space bringing things closer instead of cranking up a fader, and physically moving the source of sound so it sits in a different place rather than panning left or right with a knob. It’ll of course require ears that know what they’re listening for, but it could lead to really cool sounding mixes that wouldn’t have been as intuitive to create using the old way, but it will still be helpful to know the old way so you can better compare them.
@AlexCBrandon9 ай бұрын
I think that a mix of wise words like these (algorithm / schmalgorithm) and in depth dives is a good mix. In fact, using intro videos like this will help people like me subscribe to discover the deep dives to learn more hands on information. Thanks for all of it.
@simonpreston6 ай бұрын
I had that Behringer Composer compressor. It was also my first. Had no idea how to use it though, so must have sold it on. Back then I had an Amiga 1200 with a 68020 cpu running Octamed. Most definitely past me would be insanely jealous of my current setup (12 core CPU, 32gigs RAM and a fair few hardware synths). There's some great music that was made with old gear, back in the day (and some still using that kind of gear today). Our brain's are conditioned to think newer = better sound. But better sound is a very subjective term, and you won't make better music just because your soundcard can recreate sound at 768'000 khz, and the noise floor is so low you can hear your heartbeat.
@tetron629 ай бұрын
Loved the A/B comparison at the end. As most of us are listening experts if we can't tell the difference, then I imagine we're not really trying to.
@lucasturney42699 ай бұрын
I appreciate the 360° logic here. I'm not a huge fan of channel strips, though I do own a few of the bx_consoles, and after trying a few "vocal compressors" and gates on very Cover-Of-The-Rolling-Stone-esque vocals, without finding the sound I was looking for, I decided to try a few channels strips. I ended up using the compressor/gate from one of the bx_consoles (I won't say which; find the one that works for you,) and it's now sitting exactly how I need it to be sitting. So much is perspective, and is subjective in nature, like most non-technical music decisions.
@MrTheog19899 ай бұрын
Always a pleasure, looking forward to the next!
@ran-diy-audio9 ай бұрын
Hi Dan! I love this format too, simply to the bone of the matter! greetings from Argentina!
@adambradley32848 ай бұрын
The quick low effort videos are still gold to me, due to the reputation you have earned with your many in-depth videos. You might not get away with it forever, but then again.... you might. I think the message here is; don' t worry about your channel while you're dealing with the latest that life has thrown at you. 116000+ people wish you well, and we will wait for you.
@cholkymilkmirage49849 ай бұрын
Channel strips are great. They add dimension depth and color to my tracks. How i set them up is that when i get a new channel strip I first I load up a channel strip on a random track and check if it raised the peak. If it did, I lower the output to match then save that as my default. And whenever I mix i load that channel strip onto every single main track minus busses and mix busses, and efx tracks like P.sends, verbs, delay, imaging etc. Currently my favrite is the SLL channel strip 2. It models a 9000. Now idk how accurate it is, i have never worked with analog gear lmao, but the A/B tests shows that it adds polish, quality, depth, etc. I love it.
@kennyzee32219 ай бұрын
You sir win the Internet! Another brilliant video. Thank you for your wisdom and your BBC voice that delivers it haha
@ExplosiveNotes9 ай бұрын
If I'll ever make plugin, I'm definitely going to implement "Accurate emulation of dust that needs to be wiggled around in the pot and virtual contact cleaner included" 😂
@M1ster779 ай бұрын
And there will be people who will use e.g. automation to actually use that "dusty pot feature" to use it in a musical or sound-design context i believe - why not make a plugin that resembles just dusty potentiometers?! I mean the crackling must sound differently on an SSL-pot compared to a Neve-pot, right?! 😇🤓😂
@simongunkel74579 ай бұрын
@@M1ster77 I would want one for that reason. But I think I could get there with Reapers JS, or Reaktor. I`d just have to think about the UI. Edit: Got there with Reaktor in a few minutes. It turns out that figuring out the UI wasn't a big problem.
@xseb19 ай бұрын
Please also include a mini game where you have to replace broken condensers or troubleshoot faulty cable connections 😂
@M1ster779 ай бұрын
sounds AWESOME! Also maybe some groundloop hum, depending on the other plugins in that channel of your daw, so you really have to dig deep to find the issue. I d also recommend random polarityflip whenever the plugin is instantiated - just like in some analogue units / cables that have been wired backwards. Man this is getting exciting! 🤣🙈@@xseb1
@DanWorrall9 ай бұрын
@soundslikeamillion77 also bursts of RF noise that go away before you can work out which channel it's on. And occasional announcements from passing taxi drivers.
@Labyrinth10109 ай бұрын
Doesn’t matter to me if it’s more short form videos like this one, or the longer ones you’re more well known for. It’s all good, brother. We’re lucky to have you. You just focus on your health.
@austindutson18999 ай бұрын
Two videos in a row! 😊 I love hearing your personal perspective!
@jeffersonbritoc9 ай бұрын
It might be just me, but sometimes it seems like some KZbinrs like to criticize just to appear to have more knowledge than they actually do. I once came across mixes from two familiar “plugin critics”, and the result was disappointing. I've seen negative reviews for amazing tools, for the smallest of reasons. Certainly, taste is something personal and no one is obliged to like everything, and certain criticisms are deserved, but the way it is done seems a bit childish to me. Dan does a fantastic job and deserves the reputation he has built. Another very interesting and honest channel is Mixing With Mike. For the vast majority, perhaps spending time trying to become better is more beneficial than complaining that the world is not the way they want it to be.
@Devdiad8 ай бұрын
I dearly hate what KZbin and social media turned into the past few years… But your videos are always the perfect reminder of what a marvel the internet can be. Thank you Dan.
@bassplayingchris9 ай бұрын
We're all just glad you're getting care period! My uncle uses the VA so I know waiting on the system us very frustrating especially if your not a doctors office kind of person. Thanks for the talking points 😊
@pascaldigital9 ай бұрын
Over a short period of time. Recording tech is more accessible than ever and better than what was available. Assuming this trend continues. Smartphones can have sophisticated DAW apps. Processors capable of unlimited stem separation. I often wonder when (not if) my recording studio will be obsolete. My backup plan was to sell all the gold records on the wall, only to find out: they aren't actual pure gold records! Anyways, great video as always Dan.
@Gaby-Lopez9 ай бұрын
Can you see the difference? I do, and in Argentina we are going through the same situation, before children could access very expensive medications through the state to cure or cope with cancer, not at this time with a liberal government that decided not to spend on those medications. Sorry and a thousand times sorry for the out of place intrusion for a video about music. Thanks for your videos Dan
@RyanHarris779 ай бұрын
I think there’s three categories for a channel strip to be evaluated by (four if you bring price into the equation). First, does it speed up your workflow? Second, does it do what’s on the tin (useful eq, compression, de-esser, saturation, etc). Third, if it models hardware, does it accurately model the hardware? The third one is the one that I think about most because it’s very easy to answer the first two. In particular there are some complicated things that influence the sound passing through the hardware. Obviously, box sound is a real, measured thing, but how accurate is it? We can only tell if someone has access to both and does a comparison. And what is the usefulness of each element of that box sound? As you’ve pointed out, we’re going to EQ anything to our liking anyway so any box sound EQ will likely be made largely redundant. Recognizing that, my interest has drifted towards the parts of the box sound that are related to transients and saturation. I’m almost certain that there are plugin manufacturers inaccurately implementing saturation to channel strips and other hardware modeled components. The most obvious inconsistency is that I’ve seen is how saturation is applied. Lower effort plugins apply saturation linearly across the frequency range, at various levels per harmonic. The hardware doesn’t necessarily model saturation this way. The best sounding console emulation plugin I own has nonlinear saturation applied in different amounts across the even and odd order harmonics in an X shape, where the even order harmonics are loudest at the lower end, and the odd order harmonics are loudest at the higher end. The X crosses around the 1k mark, presumably not accidentally where the vocal range and more sensitive parts of our hearing are. The other part is the transient nuances introduced by the electronics that I don’t really have the equipment to measure. So, for me, outside of workflow, the special sauce is how saturation is applied. Flat is fine, but leaves a lot on the table. If you want to test this for yourself, you can compare the various applications of saturation on a plugin like the Black Box HG-2MS, where you can select flat or dial in saturation curves. In my opinion, saturation curves are where the magic is.
@Mik3l249 ай бұрын
Really all that matters in a modern plugin is that you know how to use it and that you enjoy it. I don't care what digital tubes are there in Supercharger GT, I just want to turn the "Compress" and "Saturation" knobs! But I've also achieved some cool sounds even with something very digital like the stock "Fast distortion" in FL Studio.
@Rocknrolldaddy81-xy8ur4 ай бұрын
Hey Dan, we’d all love to see you branch out into other related topics. Have you considered doing interviews with all the big guitar channels, to give them tips on tone and arrangement?
@DanWorrall4 ай бұрын
Sounds like fun. They haven't considered inviting me yet though.
@shorerocks9 ай бұрын
Dan, you wonder why your last video blew up? We all missed you. And made it a priority to watch asap.
@acdnrg9 ай бұрын
Dan hints on the usability factor when he says you might like the layout of a non-stock plugin better than the same algorithm under a stock GUI. The same is true for hardware and software, with a controller being the synthesis of thesis and antithesis. But if you make plugins as accessible as hardware by providing enough (non-audio processing) controller hardware, you will spend in the same ballpark. Unless you don´t stick with anonymous 4x4 encoders or 8 faders that is. Which may be a preference because of bang for buck or desktop real estate. It´s great to have so many options between the extremes, everybody can find their sweet spot and be happy with it.
@markyazzigreen80829 ай бұрын
A short vid from you Dan is really a condensed "keeping it real" perspective of value, sometimes a point is lost in a long technical vid. You could probably do valuable shorts!!
@RainbowRadioLabАй бұрын
Couldn't have said it better myself. No really. Gotta say, I first had a chance to see Pro Tools in action around 2010 and I was hooked. Fifteen years later, having grown up in the old studios, this is still me: 🙀
@thejacevekexperience9 ай бұрын
My opinion on the subject of console emulators got enlightened when I inserted one at the head of the plug in strip on every track in a 250 track wide multi track. No f/x, no eq, no added saturation, nothing but switching it in to the mix. And of course double checking the gain match at the head and the tail of each strip. Switching them all on and switching them all off and listening to the difference is a powerful experience. It's like cracking open a geode.... The exterior conpared to the interior. Than the realization that the emulators do behave differently brand vs brand Whats your favorite?
@garcemac9 ай бұрын
My first tool for recording my music was a Fostex X-15 four track cassette recorder. It cost $649 Canadian plus tax. In 1988. Now I wake up every day and thank technology for what I have available to record with today.
@hinesification9 ай бұрын
We’re very happy that you’re back in game!
@MrTunes3339 ай бұрын
Good video. Very good point in that generally all plugins can be snake oil in certain circumstances or magic depending on usage. And if one has an idea and a sound they want then there is plenty there to do the job without hanging on the promise of a plugin creator telling you that putting your sounds through their plugins will be magic, like making it sound like old records that engineers and mixers busted their asses achieving. With regard to government. One must not forget to ask what policies led to an increase of nearly 10 million people moving into the UK within 20 years. After that, among other policies that led to damaging self-grown service workers, it does not matter what government is in power, the issues have been already manifested.
@katabatica9 ай бұрын
Onya Dan. Keep being awesome and authentic.
@maqimusic9 ай бұрын
Hi Dan! Nice to hear these "low effort videos". Very sorry to hear about the resurgence of the Crohn's. I hope your new regime is helpful. I love your attitude to all this analogue/digital audio stuff!!! Actually just to sound and music full stop. I agree 100% with your last video and this one - politics included. As a live sound engineer who has the privilege to do festival walk-in gigs with bands I love, and having done so from all analogue to all digital, I couldn't agree with you more. Once gains and basic EQs are set in the changeover I spend more time turning off inappropriate processing (plugin or stock) than anything else, apart from fader manipulation where necessary for balance for the first couple of songs. THEN I can start actually mixing. Regardless of provenance, people seem to forget that these things are tools to be used in appropriate circumstances, rather than things which must always be done. I also think that the use of DAWs and digital consoles leads many to mix with eyes rather than ears. Anyways, I love your contribution to all of this, regardless of so-called effort. I find your commentary to be witty, appropriately sarcastic, insightful, and most importantly, thought provoking. Thanks for all you do, sir! And may your health improve ASAP! 🙏😎🙏
@seamusmcsorley76389 ай бұрын
Dan, as someone struggling with a chronic illness in an awful healthcare system, my heart goes out to you. Best of luck.
@KozmykJ9 ай бұрын
I HAD started to amass a Channel Strip plugin collection but I soon realised that Most made little real difference. I changed to only picking ones with a Noticeable Colouration. I think I bought just One last year. Or was it Two ? I know that the Lindell Helios 69 was one that I'd been waiting on a deal for.
@simonhartley2288 ай бұрын
Great video as always, Dan. Would love to hear your thoughts on clocking... specifically, are external master clocks worth it? Or is there any difference between clocking an external preamp using a dedicated BNC cable VS clocking via ADAT for example.
@DanWorrall8 ай бұрын
A master clock can be a good idea if you have multiple different devices that need a common clock. Not convinced it helps otherwise, but I haven't done any tests. When mixing in the box the clock can only affect what you hear anyway, as jitter is only a factor at the AD/DA stages.
@simonhartley2288 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall thanks Dan. Would jitter not also be a concern when recording? Although to that end, if I'm not hearing any audible issues (clicks, pops etc) can I assume that all is okay and move on with my life? My very limited understanding is that jitter would either create audible issues or wouldn't. As opposed to better clocking making things 'sound better'. Is this the case?
@DanWorrall8 ай бұрын
@@simonhartley228 yes, also when recording. Clicks and pops would suggest more serious issues: jitter just means slight variations in the timing of the clock, which would mean slight errors in the resulting sample values, which probably just means a slightly higher noise floor.
@matts.11909 ай бұрын
Awesome video, as always. Here's a comment to support you and show the algo that you are in fact a healer of dropsies !
@Alej_9159 ай бұрын
I do love your highly detailed vids, but listening to you essentially "shoot the shit" and giving honest opinions like this are equally entertaining and satisfies my confirmation bias lol. Good work, Dan. Hope you're doing well my dude