当鲍勃-穆格和其他人正在开创振荡器、滤波器、放大器等的电压控制概念时,鲍勃-穆格再次打破常规,构思了一个固定的滤波器组;没有电压控制!这不是均衡器,尽管它具有均衡器的某些视觉特征。不,固定滤波器组的目的是增强主信号,增加特定频率的谐波或去除其他频率的谐波。当时,音乐家和工程师们正努力应对音乐界风起云涌的新型合成器,以及如何在作曲和演奏领域使用它们。
一些人希望获得全新的、前所未闻的音效,将自己和听众带入音乐体验的新世界。另一些人则希望创造出更传统、更熟悉的声音,同时还能突破界限,利用传统 “非插电式 “乐器所不具备的新电压控制、功能和特性。有些人则希望两者兼得。这就是 Moog 固定滤波器组。这种滤波器可帮助作曲家和演奏家在信号中加入微妙或不太微妙的共振,或完全去除频段。当这一过程与未经改动的 “干 “信号混合时,可以模仿传统乐器的实际表现,因为传统乐器的构造和设计使其具有固有的自然共振模式。它还可以单独作为一个独特而富有创造性的音源,提供其他滤波器结构所不具备的声音塑造可能性。无论是传统的还是新潮的音乐作品,它都是一个绝佳的模块和补充。
当然,音乐家不会将自己的创造力局限于既定用途!该滤波器通过为信号添加独特的强调和咬合效果,开辟了令人惊叹的音效远景。通过在频谱的特定点添加或减去信号中的谐波内容,这种效果超出了基本均衡器的范畴。
当然,这一插件始于 Bob Moog 的天才和远见。下一阶段,模拟模块化合成器和那些复活过去伟大模块并为未来开发新模块的人重新崛起。914 的几个克隆版本主要基于有源滤波器设计结构。914 的原始结构使用简单的电感器、电容器和电阻器作为滤波器单元,其微妙的相互作用在无菌的半导体世界中已经消失。最近的这些努力是英勇的,生产出了值得钦佩的克隆产品。然而,基于原始结构的设计却亟待开发。我们找到了电感器的货源,仔细研究了原理图,剔除了复制原理图时出现的错误,设计了电路板,最终非常准确和忠实地复制了穆格在其原始用户手册中公布的原始响应,请参见 http://moogarchives.com/ 上的 914 FFB 页面。
有了可靠的硬件版本,就可以开始制作软件模型了。通过对硬件进行仔细的特性分析和测量,并在软件模型中保留穆格 FFB 独特的两级设计结构,最终形成了一个忠实于原版的软件模型。此外,Pulsar 914 还增加了一些额外的功能,例如可以将每个单元的输出导向左声道或右声道,从而为滤波器的魅力、实用性和特性增添了更多可能性。
简而言之,Pulsar 914 是对 Inductor 914 固定滤波器组一丝不苟的完美实现。
特点
具有 14 个复古风格的固定频率电感器滤波器。
有一个 LP 和一个 HP 架滤波器
12 个带通滤波器的间隔为半个倍频程,频率范围从 125 Hz 到 5.8kHz。
左声道可选择分成两个六频段滤波器(175Hz、350Hz、700Hz、1.4kHz、2.8khz 和 5.6 kHz 加上低通),右声道可选择分成另外六个频段(125Hz、250Hz、500Hz、1kHz、2kHz、4kHz 加上高通)。这是一种极富音乐性的分割,因为它可以作为两个独立的固定滤波器组来使用,滤波器之间的间隔为八度,右声道与左声道之间的偏移为半个八度。
干湿交叉推子可在处理过的信号与干信号或外部信号之间进行混音,同时还可在各组之间进行手动和电压控制平移。
零延迟
macOS:AU、AAX 和 VST3 格式。
Windows VST3 和 AAX 格式。
At a time when Bob Moog and others were pioneering the concept of voltage control for oscillators, filters, amplifiers, and more, Bob Moog again broke the mold and conceived a fixed filter bank; no voltage control! This was not an equalizer although it had certain visual characteristics of one. No, the intent of the FFB was to enhance the primary signal, adding harmonics at specific frequencies or removing them at others. This was a time when musicians and engineers were struggling to come to terms with the new synthesizers charging across the music industry and how to employ them in the composing and performing world.
Some wanted completely new and never before heard sonic landscapes to push themselves and their audiences into new worlds of musical experience. Others wanted to create more traditional and familiar sounds, while still pushing the boundaries and making use of the new voltage controls, features, and character not available in a traditional “un-plugged” instrument. Some wanted both. Enter the Moog Fixed Filter Bank. A filter which helped composers and performers by allowing them to add subtle or not so subtle resonances to the signal or removing frequency bands altogether. This process, when mixed in with the unaltered, “dry” signal, can mimic the actual behavior of a traditional instrument which has inherent natural, resonant modes due to construction and design. It can also act on its own as a unique and creative source of sound shaping possibilities not available in other filter structures. It’s a wonderful module and addition to any musical composition whether traditional or on the edge.
Of course, musicians are not going to confine their creativity to an intended use! This filter opens up amazing sonic vistas by adding a unique emphasis and bite to a signal. This results in an effect that goes beyond a basic equalizer by adding or subtracting harmonic content to a signal at specific points in the frequency spectrum.
This plug-in of course started with the genius and vision of Bob Moog. The next stage came with the resurgence of analog modular synthesizers and those who were resurrecting the great modules of the past and developing new modules for the future. Several clones of the 914 were being introduced primarily based on active filter design structures. The original structure of the 914, using simple inductors, capacitors, and resistors for the filter cells, has subtle interactions which become lost in the sterile world of semiconductors. These recent efforts were valiant and produced clones worthy of admiration. However, a design based on The original structure was begging to be pursued. A source for inductors was found, the schematics were scrutinized, errors in the schematics from copying were weeded out, circuit boards were designed, and the result was an extremely accurate and faithful copy of the original response as published by Moog in their original owner’s manual, see the 914 FFB page at http://moogarchives.com/.
With a solid hardware version in hand, a software model could begin. Careful characterization and measurement of the hardware, along with a software model keeping the unique structure of the Moog FFB with its two stage design, has resulted in a software model that faithfully matches and follows that of the original. Adding some extra features, such as being able to direct the output of each cell to either the left or right channel, opens up additional possibilities that add to the charm, utility, and character of the filter.
The Pulsar 914 is simply put, a meticulous, spot-on implementation of the Inductor 914 Fixed Filter Bank.
Features
Features fourteen vintage style fixed frequency, inductor based filters.
There is a LP and a HP shelf filter
Twelve Band Pass filters are set at half octave interval spacings, which range from 125 Hz through to 5.8kHz.
Option to split into two six band filters (175Hz, 350Hz, 700Hz, 1.4kHz, 2.8Khz and 5.6 kHz plus Low Pass) for the Left Channel, and the alternate six bands (125 Hz, 250 Hz, 500 Hz, 1kHz, 2 kHz, 4kHz plus High Pass) for the Right channel. This is a very musical split, as it can perform as two separate Fixed Filter Banks with Octave spacing between filters, and the Right channel is offset against the Left channel by a half octave.
Wet-Dry cross fader mixes between the treated signal and the dry or external signal , again with manual and Voltage Controlled panning between banks.
Zero latency
macOS: AU, AAX and VST3 formats.
Windows: VST3 and AAX formats.