Shocking results: 16 EQ plugins tested. Do they all sound the same?! (Part 2)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ส.ค. 2024
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    After many requests on my first EQ video to put newer plugins to the test, like the slate digital, softube and plugin alliance stuff, I took up the challenge and tested 16 more EQ plugins so show that a normal digital EQ can be used to replicate all of these analogue modelling EQs.

ความคิดเห็น • 644

  • @APMastering
    @APMastering  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    See this update video for quantified results with a more robust methodology: th-cam.com/video/h9OsUSXKiDg/w-d-xo.html

  • @XS10SEALS
    @XS10SEALS 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +129

    I don't think people understand just how good we have it today compared to how it used to be back then. This is a good reality check.

    • @Bittamin
      @Bittamin 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      People also completely forget how expensive studio setups were to have a full hardware situation. The transformers and natural flavor are cool but, so is stock logic when you really figure it out 😂

    • @supercompooper
      @supercompooper 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      When I was just a kid I had to walk 5 mi to the river and then down to the bottom of the cliffs to get the tone that I needed.

    • @doodoogtube
      @doodoogtube 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Facts!
      ….We have it really good.👍🏾 👍🏾

    • @OLLiGoldeaux
      @OLLiGoldeaux 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      it is amazing. i work today same way - in most cases i need no EQ, less compression ( Tape is expensive, Gear make unwanted noise..... ) Less is often more - but all wishes a sound producer could have - Todays DAW can all these things.

  • @DrProgNerd
    @DrProgNerd 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +109

    I needed this 50 plugins ago. 🙃

    • @JT-qc2nb
      @JT-qc2nb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Ha! Indeed.

    • @chriswaltonmusic
      @chriswaltonmusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Me too! 🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @RANGDAP
      @RANGDAP 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      😂

    • @coldskoolbeatz
      @coldskoolbeatz 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @axxojaxx2510
      @axxojaxx2510 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      😮‍💨😅🤣

  • @joa1232
    @joa1232 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    When I started, I told myself, that I will only look for new plugins as soon as Im able to hear differences between plugins. Turns out I never had to look for a new eq, ableton stock eq does the job 90% of the time for me

    • @headspacetheace
      @headspacetheace 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      nevermind the fact that Ableton eq has an amazing workflow, having your whole channel strip be visible and tweakable as soon as you click on a track is so much more efficient than opening and closing each plugin indiviually

    • @Anktual
      @Anktual หลายเดือนก่อน

      Gullfuss, acon digital defilter, zynaptiq unfilter. While gullfus sounds the same as every iq its very adaptive but unfiter and defilter cant be replicated with any other standart eq.

  • @doodoogtube
    @doodoogtube 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +76

    Ok hold on.
    1. Yes you can get away with just using one EQ if you had to…you don’t need 20 EQ’s.
    2. In the video he’s playing white noise and when listen to it’s Delta, you hear a muffled hiss at a lower volume…People, that “is” the difference (this is normal). If he was playing music, you’d hear the music’s delta. If it was 100% silent using multiple EQ tweets, then those 2 EQ’s would scientifically sound exactly the same.
    3. All EQ’s do NOT have the same “Q” factors and curves which makes them different from one another which also makes them unique.
    4. If you own an EQ that could replicate different Q’s and curves, you could replicate any EQ (it’s saturation is another story).
    5. A seasoned engineer is not going to waste his or his client’s time trying to make a stock EQ (w/no saturation) sound like a Pultec using 20 steps when he could just use a Pultec plug-in(that he bought on sale) that could do the job in 4 knob turns (with its saturation included). “These are Facts”.
    Bottom line:
    -Yes you don’t need 20 EQ’s and the best EQ is the one you got.
    -If you don’t know why you’d use one EQ over another, don’t worry about it if you’re only a producer, do your thing.
    -If you’re a Mix and/or Mastering Engineer, you’ve been doing this a while and you already know.
    -My advice to buying plug-ins is to only buy what you need and know why you need it.✌🏾

    • @yajrobot
      @yajrobot 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      The only real matter is the user experience and comfort beteen different plugins. Most of the audiophilic crap a lot of sound engineers fool themselves with is illusion to tease ego.

    • @nicolaistrandet830
      @nicolaistrandet830 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      1000%

  • @Wizardofvoz2
    @Wizardofvoz2 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    Been preaching this forever. Marketing brilliance from the plugin makers. I fell for it myself for a while. I have been recording/mixing/mastering since 1976, so I have lived the changes. Y’all just don’t know!

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      nice one. i bought fancy power cables and all sorts over the years

  • @edesbalazs
    @edesbalazs 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I'm just a hobbyist, but this is so nice to hear. I had the same sentiment for a while: If you hear a problem, and know what tool is suitable to fix it, then it doesn't really matter which exact tool you've got, you can get the result you want.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      a bad workman blames his tools. a good workman makes cool stuff with bad tools

  • @davegamble1694
    @davegamble1694 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    As an EQ designer who doesn't believe in the marketing, I'm deeply familiar with all the points you raise here. I also fully endorse null testing, and you're doing it right. One thing that might help you out is the difference between parallel and serial band topologies. Things like a Sontec or Massenburg EQ have parallel bands, so when you engage them they sum differently to a series EQ. Likely the issues canceling the Curve Bender stem from that, though I confess to not having checked the schematics. I don't know if your preferred EQ offers a parallel mode, but it's not too hard to add.
    Regarding the issue of particular things having interesting shapes and engineers preferring them, I'd draw your attention to the "SSL knob-colour wars". Engineers moving from studio to studio would get very used to things like Q tightening as they increased gain. Then going to a different room with a different coloured knob, the channel EQ behaved differently. If you're a gigging mix engineer (not that such a job really exists any more) and you're expecting your board to work one way, and suddenly you're faced with one that works differently, you feel hamstrung and slowed down. So I do believe that for people who are very used to a piece of kit working a certain way, there's value in them being able to continue to do so. If you've learned one EQ deeply, you will likely be faster with that EQ than with one that works differently. For me this has meant needing to be able to emulate all the subtle and varying weird shapes and offering them in one place.
    Phase cancellation in the mids and low end is, indeed, something to take for granted. The thing that drew me to EQ as a problem was the issue of getting the high end right. I refer you back to the "cramping" "warping" wars of the 2010s. You'll definitely find phase cancel content up near nyquist between some of these EQs. This is much less of an issue nowadays than it used to be, thankfully. But the 90s and 2000s were PLAGUED with EQs that warped at the top end. Bells were unsymmetric at high frequencies. This did make life a bit miserable. Using a second band to correct for it was not unusual, and in those days when you didn't have so many bands to play with, that was bad. That's something that contributed to the notion of digital sounding "cold" or "sterile" - the top end wasn't where you expected it to be!
    All the best with your endeavours. It's nice to see someone doing some science :)

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      nice one, thanks for your comment, that was an interesting read! I honestly dont know all that much about the coding side of making a great sounding EQ. I can only code at a pretty basic level and if I wrote my own EQ plugin from scratch it would probably have all of the problems you mentioned, which is why I'm going to get lots of help when designing a plugin that I've got an idea for

    • @ScottRadkeMusic
      @ScottRadkeMusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Leaving this here…. DMG Equilibrium rules 🤘🏽
      (If I could have only one…. this is my “desert island” choice!)

    • @HR2635
      @HR2635 หลายเดือนก่อน

      cramping is still an issue for some..Nova does is but not really bad though. Some expensive EQs do it too and way worse. But OK. Many wont hear it. Unless you put such an EQ on 20-30 tracks and wonder why the top end ounds weird in some places. Again: most wont hear it and dont care AND its not way as bad as before.

  • @markkellen2392
    @markkellen2392 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I believe it was Dave Gamble of DMG who said something like "All EQs sound the same except for the make-up amplifiers" and advocates for Clean EQs followed by a saturation plug if you so desire.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      YES. don't know who that is but he sounds like he knows what he's talking about

    • @nem4822
      @nem4822 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@APMastering Hes the creator of Equilibrium, the best eq plugin on the market.

    • @Woji52
      @Woji52 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      @@nem4822extremely ironic response given the video and this original comment lol

    • @nem4822
      @nem4822 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Woji52 never said best in term of sound, its the features and the curve options that make it the best.

    • @alexdiplock71
      @alexdiplock71 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yes you really should know DMG Dave is a legend and equilibrium as I commented on your other video has all the curve snd Q responses of many fave eqs ready to go you should probably do a video with that as well as it’s a go to single eq to rule them all 😊

  • @deepsynth3495
    @deepsynth3495 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Hitting people where it hurts. Enjoying the honesty man. Thank you

  • @omegalitico
    @omegalitico 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I'm glad that at 26 years old I can still hear that high frequency noise lol. Nice video too.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      yeah, by 40 most people wont hear that. its quiet for me, i need to turn it up

    • @PlottingTheDownfall
      @PlottingTheDownfall 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@APMastering in my 50s...I get my hearing checked every other year. still hear cleanly up to 18k +/- a few dBs. I was always sensitive to loud noises as a kid, and UHF sounds. had to wear custom ear plugs a lot of the time. Then once in a band, always wore them, and to this day, I wear them in the car. Blessed to be able to hear that high...now, my probably frequency is 3k, I have a dip since getting covid in 2020, of 3dB on the right side.

    • @gameon2000
      @gameon2000 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I'm 52 and can't hear shit above 15k and very little over 12k. Still i can hear all the hiss in this vid 😂

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@gameon2000 watch part 3

  • @corriefraser
    @corriefraser 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    We've all fallen into the plugin rabbit-hole. They're leading us up the primrose path. The most important aspects of a track will always be the writing and musicianship/lyrical genuis, followed by the production/arrangement.

  • @tettorotto
    @tettorotto 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    3:16 Dan Worral recently made a video with some Softube plugin, showing that they were using a FIR filter for oversampling. If that Curve Bender has any modeled saturation maybe they're using the same OS filter and that would explain the phase weirdness.
    Great video btw!

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      thanks. yeah, im sure he's dug into it more. I'm mainly interested in debunking the broader claim rather than the specific coding details

  • @BorisBarroso
    @BorisBarroso 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    Excellent comparison. We are bombarded by companies to buy and we don’t do any tests to see what we are buying. I was buying a lot of plugins and I was doing it more because of an itch to buy and not really learning how to use my plugins

    • @AzurBaumi
      @AzurBaumi 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Very relatable. I went out to become an EDM producer and so far ended up as a plugin and preset collector 😅

  • @BrianSJames
    @BrianSJames 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Excellent and insightful. Love your enthusiasm... Keep it up!!

  • @jcpuga
    @jcpuga 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    I learned 2 things from this video.
    1. I have “Golden Ears”.
    2. Yea…I like the GUI basically. I’m aware ReaEQ can probably suffice 😅

    • @jcpuga
      @jcpuga 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@antrave nice, wasn’t aware of that one 🎊🎉

    • @mirkomarkovic3438
      @mirkomarkovic3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ReaEq has horrible cramping issues

    • @jcpuga
      @jcpuga 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mirkomarkovic3438 I personally use Kirchoff and Signum Audio-Comp, Clipper, and Limiter

  • @atellsoundtheory8774
    @atellsoundtheory8774 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    PART TWO
    For the first point, we need to answer the question if your input signal is able to probe the entire signal space relevant to audio signals and equalisers. If the system under investigation is completely linear, which also excludes any kind of quantisation errors that are always present in digital realisations, then you can correctly argue that white noise statistically probes the input space in a way that creates a complete picture of the system’s processing. But as discussed earlier, actual linear system implementations do differ in their quantisation handling, which won’t be detectable with this method. Even if you decide to ignore these effects on the signal outcome because you argue that they only make an audible difference (we’ll come to the meaning of that later) in certain pathological scenarios, your conclusion is still invalidated by the fact that you did not look at this case.
    But the main interest here is really the performance of modelled non-linear equalisers, so let’s focus on those. With non-linearity in place, you can no longer argue that white noise is probing your system sufficiently because the important step of decomposing into a sinusoidal basis does not commute with non-linear systems in general. In fact, there is no way to exhaustingly sample the input space of a non-linear processor and therefore any conclusion that a system is not deviating from linearity based on observation of a finite number of inputs and outputs is invalid in a strict sense. That is, unless you make certain assumptions about the kind of nonlinearity to expect, which allows you to look in the right places.
    So, does the white noise signal you are using look in some of the right places for the kind of non-linearity that is to be expected in EQs? Unfortunately, no. The nonlinearities of an EQ typically are in the pre or post stages or in the resonant feedback loop of the filters. Common to all these locations is that the (smooth) nonlinearity is tuned such that it shows at high amplitudes, usually at around -6 to 0 dBfs in a digital realisation.
    Your white noise signal peaks at around -6 dBfs and appears to follow an approximately Gaussian sample distribution, which is consistent with the rather low RMS level of -16 dBfs. The RMS level is equivalent to the expected amplitude that is driving the nonlinearity. A fairly typical memoryless distortion using a hyperbolic tangent comes with a power series expansion that has a cubic dominating non-linear term with a coefficient of 1/3 or -9.5dB. That means you would expect distortion products to appear roughly below - 3*16 - 9.5 dBfs = 57.5 dBfs. Your metering only goes to -24 dBfs and you never show the noise floor of your null-test, so your result is inconclusive, at best. Had you tested at an RMS level of -6 dB instead, we could have seen and heard the first distortion effects at -27.5 dBfs, which would have made a great difference in terms of audibility.
    Another way to clearly expose non-linearity is to make sure the gain loop is driven at a high level. That would require both a reasonable input gain and a filter setting that produces a significant feedback path gain. Such settings come with high Q and high band gain. You have avoided both in your tests.
    If you consider non-linearities with memory, which you should, then using a wide-band stationary signal like your noise signal can actually prevent the internal state of the non-linear system from ever getting into the region of significant nonlinearity. For example, a number of nonlinear circuits only reacts to transients. Others only react to strongly coherent signals like tones. You’ve eliminated both these possible results by your choice of using white noise.
    Let’s get to the point of perception. You asserted that small deltas are inaudible. And you’re right for your noise signal. A small difference signal does not change the perception so that both results would sound the same. The problem is that this conclusion does not generalise. To understand the significance to perception we need to look at the phenomenon of auditory masking. We can hear a quieter signal component only if it is not being masked by a louder signal component. The level difference for which the quieter signal is still audible follows from the masking relationship of the two signals, which depends on both distance in frequency and in time.
    Your noise signal masks everything, both in time and in frequency, such that any difference less than roughly 6dB below the noise level cannot be perceived. That is a pretty poor choice for trying to argue about a perceivable difference. A much better choice would have been using a severely band-limited signal, like for example critical band noise at different frequencies, and use that to see if there are any difference components outside of the masking volume of the test signal. Just for comparison, narrow band noise at around 1kHz allows for the perception of signal components at below 500 Hz at a level of more than 80dB below the primary stimulus level, or alternatively for the perception of components above 4 kHz at a level of more than 40dB below the primary stimulus level. That’s a lot more than what you have demonstrated.
    A linear EQ would only generate quantisation artefacts outside of the band, which you have also not looked at. A non-linear EQ may produce signal components that are making an audible difference and are being perceived as pleasant. You have not ruled out the existence of these components in any way using your methodology.
    The third and final concern regards your choice of system samples. The question here is, have you tried to maximise the difference between the EQs you have matched and thereby attempted to falsify your hypothesis? Good science must always try to falsify, otherwise you don’t proof anything apart from your confirmation bias. I’m trying to be perfectly fair here, but it doesn’t look like you didn’t really try very hard to challenge your hypothesis. Throughout your demonstration you have used single bands at moderate settings. You avoided high gains, high Qs, high center frequencies. From what I explained above, it is obvious that you have steered clear of band interactions like you have in alternative non-serial topologies, you have avoided filter warping due to poorly designed filters without compensation for response distortion or response aliasing, you have avoided non-linear effects.
    This is already a much too long response, so let me come to my conclusion. Your methods were only superficially scientific, despite your claims. Your strong conclusion and accusations have no foundation in what you have shown. I do not say that you conclusion is wrong, but you certainly have failed to prove it. To be fair, there are black sheep in the plugin industry, just like everywhere. However, your generalisation is false and just as unfair as suggesting you just did your video to manipulate people into buying your classes. Which of course is not true.
    So, if you do science, you have to go all the way. There’s no such thing as a little rigour. And if you don’t have the necessary insight, then I would suggest you do some research first and read a selection of the plentiful papers that deal with modelling of non-linear analog circuits.
    If you ever intend to do a follow-up video that corrects your mistakes and tries to arrive at a conclusion that is not agenda driven, then please get in touch. I’m more than willing to work out a scientific protocol that would actually try verify your hypothesis.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      thanks for the detailed two part comment. For most long comments I will only read the first sentence or ignore it entirely because in my experience, the longer the comment generally the more of a waste of time it is to read, but yours was not so I stuck with it and read all of it.
      Your comment is the most thorough and high quality critique of my video, and actually I agree with you for the most part (with my pushbacks below), but I feel a bit like you are hitting in a picture hook with a sledge hammer.
      I'll first reply in a more broad sense and then I'll reply to technical point below.
      My video was aimed at a wide audience and the idea was pretty much "hey look, you don't need to buy all these different EQs because they sound pretty similar for the most part and why would anyone care about pultec curve or whatever anyway because each song and sound needs its own specific EQ treatment, so better to learn how to use one EQ before buying 10 different ones". When you put this concept under a microscope, you see that not only was my test fairly primitive but it also demonstrates the EQs I tested are all different to some small amount even with the limited testing methodology employed. However, my aim was never to show that they are all mathematically identical, use the same code or make false claims in their marketing about modelling X piece of hardware. The video concept is more about the practical application of EQ in sound design, mixing and mastering for a broad or even lay audience. I never expected to be having discussions with DSP professionals. The idea I'm trying to convey is, even if a company models a vintage EQ in a compelling way, so what? From a practical standpoint, if you know how to use one good EQ properly, you don't need various different simulations of hardware EQ in an attempt to get different "flavours". Before the high quality plugins we have today, engineers needed to use different gear for different purposes because those pieces of gear all had hardware limitations. When I do a mix on a neve, I love the sound of the board, and the EQs and the compression can be cool, but I often find myself reaching for outboard because of the limitations and imprecision of that tool. With plugins, such as Nova, I don't need to reach for different EQs because I can get where I need to go easily, quickly and with precision. That's the idea here. It's not a comprehensive proof that the entire plugin industry is engaging in false marketing. They do convince people to buy their plugins though with unquantifiable, untestable, subjective type claims and language about their character and use influencer to provide the illusion that a different EQ will lead to radically different results in their mixes etc. But that's a different topic to my testing methodology and the claim you are most interested in.
      In response to the more technical points, I don't understand what "hyperbolic tangent comes with a power series expansion that has a cubic dominating non-linear term with a coefficient of 1/3" means. Despite being a proficient python programmer, my nerd powers are less powerful than yours here, and I dip my hat. Moving on, you write a lot about white noise but overlook the fact that I offer a moderately long AB test between two plugins, in two different ABs in my video, in which I switch back and forth quite a lot of times, and there is not a huge audible difference. I'm open to people hearing differences here but I think they are similar enough that most people would fail an ABX test. And anything which most people would fail an ABX test for, is probably not not something which I will care a lot about.
      So although you are right, I did not play any material that would demonstrate the time domain features of these EQs in all of the tests, I did play music for two of the plugins and I'm use you agree that music, in this case a full rock pop band instrumental passage, is adequate test material for plugins aimed at music production.
      In terms of the interaction between bands, extreme Q settings and high gain revealing increasing divergences between the qualities of the plugins, I honestly find this practically uninteresting and I'll explain why. I come from a mastering background. When I see people use 10 bands of EQ with tight Qs and extreme gain settings, I instantly assume they dont know what they are doing. As a mastering engineer, I use as few bands as possible, reasonably often a single band, with as smooth a Q as possible, with conservative gain. In my opinion, that is the key to a good sounding EQ treatment. So I am interested in the sound of plugins given that kind of treatment. If someone is using many tight Qs at extreme gain settings, they are almost certainly destroying whatever it is they are EQing and then the more subtle differences in the band interactions is like examining the quality of the finish on a cup before a bull runs into the china shop.

    • @atellsoundtheory8774
      @atellsoundtheory8774 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@APMastering I think you have a fair point. I agree that knowing how to use an EQ properly is much more relevant than owning a particular EQ model. However, this is not quite that point that came across in your videos. Particular in the first video, you are quite clearly speaking of an ongoing scam by plugin manufacturers and in your second video you put a lot of emphasis on the scientific methodology you employ. I think both these points cannot be upheld and if you are in fact honest to your audience, you should make that clear. Otherwise one could argue that it is you who is trying to scam people into buying your course material, which I'm not going to suggest, but it might appear a reasonable hypothesis.
      So may I kindly suggest you make a third follow up video where you address these issues. If not, me and other plugin developers will certainly suffer from the spread of mistrust and the customers' attitude towards innovative plugins and proper research.

    • @atellsoundtheory8774
      @atellsoundtheory8774 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Oh, and I have deliberately ignored your audio examples comparison because it is not scientific to start with. We all know that comparisons like that are extremely subjective, especially if not performed blindly. And is also did not contribute anything to my point, as you have not shown the Delta and all my other points regarding the sampling of the parameter space etc. still hold.

  • @zachary963
    @zachary963 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    3:58 um my mother in law, who has zero experience with any music production anything and who currently has a cold and is therefore stuffy and unable to hear well and who is listening on my old iPhone, can CLEARLY hear the difference.
    I think you might need new speakers if you think that all of these null.

  • @hansmemling2311
    @hansmemling2311 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I just tested the Iron plug in you recommended on some drums. Holy cow, what an amazing plug in.

  • @seenbelow
    @seenbelow 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Guess you've inspired me to test out more plugins if they are worth using. I specifically only bought EQs with tasty saturation, but then again sometimes I might have made the mistake of hearing with my eyes :)

  • @Whiteseastudio
    @Whiteseastudio 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Science! Love it! 💛

  • @sheutkhaibit5332
    @sheutkhaibit5332 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love how you approach non-sense comments with facts and science. Thanks for the content!

  • @phladjki
    @phladjki 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thanks for doing this. Several of these didn’t null nearly as well as I expected. Definitely heard substantial hiss / noise on a few after attempted null.
    In terms of being scientific, I would say that leaving audible noise behind means that you haven’t demonstrated that these are equivalent.
    Equivalent would mean: there’s no audible difference. What you’ve demonstrated is most literally an audible difference.

    • @ABbruh
      @ABbruh 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He addressed this in the video

  • @JT-qc2nb
    @JT-qc2nb 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Good stuff. I was the one who commented on having the quick curves handy for Pultecs, bax, etc. As a rebuttal, I didn't say they're used randomly. They're used when needed and with purpose, so you misconstrued the comment.
    I do, however, know what you're saying, which is basically that you need 1 good eq to handle everything. That's true. However, that's like saying that you only need 1 good knife to cut all your food. Yes, a good chef's knife will handle pretty much everything, but if you have a variety of knives, they are built to perform specific functions. Both get the job done. That's my point.
    On another token, thanks for the null tests. Hopefully I'm able to resell all my other non-specific EQs now before people see this video ;)

  • @5adb0iMusicOfficial
    @5adb0iMusicOfficial หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So glad to see a "no-bs" followup video!

  • @soyozzz
    @soyozzz 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    This is a big revelation, thanks for the information

  • @tbonebeats6429
    @tbonebeats6429 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In the back of my mind I always believed those "vintage" eq emulations were just a standard eq with those vintage eq curves dialed in but the GUI convinced me that It was real emulation that had mimicked all of the internal components. I've foolishly spent thousands chasing "that" sound when all I really needed was a stock eq & a saturation plugin.

  • @VectorSpaceElement
    @VectorSpaceElement หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Free Reaper repositories FTW💪

  • @MuzdokOfficial
    @MuzdokOfficial 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    You deserve subs for speaking your opinion without fear and its also a unique take that's worth listening to. Always give every sides a fair chance in a trial lol

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      to be honest, I've got a very loud mouth and it might get me in trouble and damage my reputation, but if I'm going to be on social media at all, I might as well not water myself down because theres already enough watered down participation trophy style content on the internet.

    • @MuzdokOfficial
      @MuzdokOfficial 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@APMastering ☝👌🙏

    • @MuzdokOfficial
      @MuzdokOfficial 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@APMastering My very loud mouth that speak honestly gives me ennemies i know that for a fact. But also more respect from the smaller precious circle around me that matter. Cheers my friend.

    • @trond-oien
      @trond-oien 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@APMastering Hear, hear!

  • @tryingtotryistrying
    @tryingtotryistrying 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    phew he didn't use my magic eq, so clearly i'm still safe to call it warm and detailed.

  • @DaveDemayClips
    @DaveDemayClips 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I will say that I am hearing some noise differences in the delta null results of a few of the EQs. But is that enough to mean anything at all? Who knows at this point.
    I’ve been mixing in Nashville for 30 years and never thought to challenge these EQ plugins with null tests. Mainly because I assumed they each had unique curves and inherent tones due to the modeled circuitry.
    But I have tested “True Peak limiters with null tests to see if they were truly clipped peaks without overshooting with digital distortion. I’ve been too occupied turning out mixes to put time into null-testing the massive pile of EQs I’ve been using. 😂
    Thanks for your boldness to challenge the ears of even seasoned engineers along the entire plugin industry. I like challenges. That closing metaphor with you banging on the guitar made me laugh out loud. 😂
    You have a new subscriber with an open mind. You’re never too old to hear fresh and new ideas, perspectives, and challenges that step outside popular narratives. Cheers!

  • @Laserus
    @Laserus 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Thanks for showing what I have always suspected.

  • @SenseiKreese
    @SenseiKreese 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The delta varied a bit there, some nulled really well, some not so much. There was def some difference in some of them. I largely agree, except I would say you talk about EQing stuff surgically, but sometimes we use it for flavour and just having nice curves at a knob is nice to have. I've got multiple desk EQ plugins, and sometimes I just get a slightly better sound from one or another on a source.

  • @nerds-nonsense
    @nerds-nonsense 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    to me this sounds like: "if you're decorating a cake don't use different piping tools, just use the basic one and you can shape it." if you have to do work to make an eq sound like another then why not just save time and energy and use that eq. Also, doesn't the fact that you can make one eq sound like another mean they objectively do not sound the same?
    only half way thru the video tho so maybe this gets addressed. but as a producer i don't find that this is less confusing
    Edit: finished the whole video, while I agree with you, I don't see it as a reason not to use a analog modeled eq if it has a sound you like

    • @JT-qc2nb
      @JT-qc2nb หลายเดือนก่อน

      Agreed. That was my point also. I got called out on one of the other EQ videos for this and being "inexperienced." Actually, it's speed. Some EQs are designed to do a very specific thing. Others, general EQing. Looking for the best and fastest tool for the job.

  • @eren3390
    @eren3390 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    when it comes to eqs, i always said this but people were like: nah

    • @ABbruh
      @ABbruh 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It’s way easier to fool someone than to convince them that they’ve been fooled.

  • @alkaiosmusic
    @alkaiosmusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Loving this type of content, nice roasting maaan. Thank you!

  • @justinhoffman1111
    @justinhoffman1111 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    good points - thats why i only use the fab filter proQ pretty much for eq and if I want something more ill use my Analog Empress Tube EQ or one of my other analong units for enhancement. Ive used digital for saturation but there is always something missing with digital and i use the tru iron ( sounds the best) but usually have to use multiple plugins - its just not the same with high quality analog units sorry if you think it is :)

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      no i think analogue does do distortion best but digital has the best control and choice. its my dream to manufacture some gear though

  • @Studio22mix
    @Studio22mix 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A lot of plugin developers won’t be happy with this, when Andrew Schepps designed a plugin for Waves they found that it didn’t match with the emulated hardware but on a 40 grand spectrum analyzer it did looked exactly the same but it sounded different. They ended up putting a high pass filter on 3 Hz and a low pass filter on 25 kHz and it matched. The filters were emulating the transformers 😉🤫🫡
    Still I’m going to buy an analog equalizer for around 2 grand because I know it’s going to sound better than a plugin, maybe it’s the tube circuit and the transformers who cares.

  • @renejrhodes88
    @renejrhodes88 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I f*cking laughed my ass off. This is as entertaining as enlightening.
    Well done mate!

  • @merlinproductions7374
    @merlinproductions7374 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I haven't bought a plugin emulation in years, with the exception of reverbs/delays. I agree
    Plugin compressors and EQs that are meant to be digital like TDR products I think are worth the dough.
    Emulations are snake oil.
    Analog is my preferred choice for its saturation offerings and tactile more natural experience workflow wise

  • @ProjectVastness
    @ProjectVastness 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Priceless ! You got a subscriber

  • @tapuwaprince
    @tapuwaprince 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Fascinating video! Those null tests were really interesting. It makes me wonder about Acustica Audio's EQ plugins since they're based on sampling rather than algorithms. Do you think they would null out the same way? Curious to see the results if you have the time and energy!

  • @JoshuaLuellen-rg8xp
    @JoshuaLuellen-rg8xp 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Well done, very well done

  • @tonygunz21
    @tonygunz21 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    It was always funny to me how you'd hear someone say that one company's 0's and 1's were "warmer" or "more open" than another's lol.

  • @Fwuzeem
    @Fwuzeem 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Exactly right. All plugin developers have are algorithms, not hardware. They all have access to the same ones, except for developers who use convolution and volterra vector kernels, or Neural Amp Modeller

    • @Studio22mix
      @Studio22mix 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Neural 6 ms. latency modeler 😂

  • @kris_lx
    @kris_lx 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    At 6:45 the real reason for this video is exposed: he's just trying to sell us something. He even throws buzz-words like 'industry secrets' at us 😂

    • @aleksandarstojceski3139
      @aleksandarstojceski3139 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Don't spend on eq but come in buy my course.

    • @RayFerretti
      @RayFerretti 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Nothing is really free

    • @JeserNoob
      @JeserNoob 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I learned a long time ago that anyone that produces frequent content is selling you something

    • @HollandOates
      @HollandOates 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah careful everyone.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      I am 100% selling courses, this isnt a secret. I don't apologise for putting mammoth amounts of energy into creating no bullshit high quality courses for a reasonable price and then offering them on social media for anyone who is interested. If you are not interested, you are free to watch my content completely for free anyway. But I'm not entirely sure why I'm supposed to spend a grand on camera gear and half of my week scripting, filming, editing videos and replying to comments answering questions and sharing my experience with everyone here if I'm not allowed to get anything out of it. If you only watch content from hobbyists who are on youtube for the love of talking about gear, then the quality of the content you are getting is going to be hobbyist level- Where I'm not a hobbyist, I'm hardly going to do all of this without placing a single ad. That's just bizarre to even think that. In every single video I upload there WILL be an ad for my courses. Feel free to skip/ignore it and watch the rest of the content.

  • @g.e.miller4335
    @g.e.miller4335 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Of course they’re all equal, that’s why they’re called equalizers.

  • @monkmusic5994
    @monkmusic5994 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    What might Dan Worral and Paul Third say to this???

    • @RayFerretti
      @RayFerretti 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Paul Third has responded to this video. Also called him out on the curve bender.

  • @amandacapsicum686
    @amandacapsicum686 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is fascinating! I love how you cut through marketing nonsense. For the next one, can you compare a basic EQ plugin with a real hardware console EQ?

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  หลายเดือนก่อน

      the next time im at my favourite recording studio I'll do it. they have a Neve VR. Won't be for a while though

  • @Catandbeats
    @Catandbeats หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Oh this is lovely, good job!

  • @BojanBojovic
    @BojanBojovic หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This channel is brilliant. 😃 Like debunking conspiracy theories, but better. 😁

  • @gonzalez2568
    @gonzalez2568 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think limitations are the one true difference, the “pre-chosen” curves are in a way a design choice. The artistic decisions we make while applying some EQ are influenced by this. Plugins today give us all of the options but none of the limitations, 1000 tracks sound great but I guess we thrive when our brain needs to make 4 tracks sound like a full song. Just my humble opinion 😅

  • @ema6897
    @ema6897 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you so much for making this.
    Snake oil in the audio industry is so normalized it drives me insane.

  • @kawinshivasoman
    @kawinshivasoman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You are brilliant. I use Aquatica Audio Salt and some Plugin Alliance analog models like the Amek 200, Amek 9099, and Knif Soma, among others. I also use Pro Q3. Actually, the analog models sound better than Pro Q3 when I boost. Pro Q3 is best for surgical cuts, but if you boost it above 6 dB, it introduces an artificial tone in the high frequencies. Try this: there are a few analog model EQs that you can boost even over 10 dB, and they still sound natural. Test this.

    • @tettorotto
      @tettorotto 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Most of the time the analog modeled EQs have a really wide Q and apply less boost or cut than the controls say. That's probably why you find them more natural.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      hmmmm i dont know. i never bought pro Q 3 and have been using pro Q 2 basically since it came out and before that I was using pro Q 1. So I dont know if they messed something up with version 3. But pro Q 2 doesnt seem to exhibit this behaviour, i can boost 30db and then get another FF instance and cut 30db and it nulls with the original signal at -70db and I cant hear any difference ABing with music.

    • @KOjoe1k67
      @KOjoe1k67 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No way. Boosting and cutting is the opposite thing of the same coin

  • @ufox77
    @ufox77 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    This all figures. I’ve gathered several different EQs from various plugin packages over the years, and only ever found myself using Ozone EQ for flexibility, the DAW for convenience, or one of the Overloud EQs that allows you to saturate specific bands (sometimes nice, sometimes lousy). I feel bad for the plug-in manufacturers because they covered most of the useful ground they could over a decade ago. I wonder if people like the vintage-style ones because they wouldn’t normally bother to mess with bandwidths, so just end up wider, more pleasant sounding curves, quickly achievable with a broad brush and less opportunity to over-correct?

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      i dont know if i feel sorry for the plugin devs any more than i feel sorry for drop shippers trying to sell lightweight shippable plastic bullshit from china to people on the internet and not making any profit after they pay their facebook ads. well... i guess its a saturated industry. find another niche.

  • @zachvalenti
    @zachvalenti 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Keep going! This is such valuable content.
    Would love to see a similar video for compressors debunking the “vintage”/“warm” marketing hype around so many offerings.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I want to do this because there is a lot of hype... the problem is, with EQs its relatively easy to do some kind of a null test but with compression its near impossible to do the same kind of test because there are too many variables. the main way I can go about this is visually showing what they are doing with long time constants, but thats not going to make for compelling content for people who believe in the snake oil.... there's people commenting here that dont believe in null tests lol, so demonstrating graphically what compressors are doing to the sound is going to be a hard sale

  • @rickscott1309
    @rickscott1309 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Well done. Got to love your guts and the truth of cold hard scientific evidence. 👏👏

  • @rickfowler3710
    @rickfowler3710 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I love that you own that multicoloured zylophone.

  • @jackflynn-oakley1937
    @jackflynn-oakley1937 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I agree massively with the premise of this video, but what I don’t understand is why you used white noise? I understand that white noise is ‘unforgiving’ in these tests but surely a perfect null would prove your point more? Even in the A/B music examples, why not just invert the phase there too? Surely a perfect null on a drum loop/acoustic guitar would be more blatant for the neigh sayers rather than white noise doing it’s thing still, which it is doing on every single ‘null’ in this video; all be it very quite.
    Again, I agree with you here; I just think using white noise to demonstrate this was a poor idea… Nothing in this video ‘nulls’ by definition and that’s the point you’re trying to make

  • @user-zr5xy5pv8w
    @user-zr5xy5pv8w 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yeah! I finally know it. This explain why most of the time I only use daw stock eq instead of these famous eqs.
    I try to add these eqs and get confuse why they add odd "vintage/warmth" to the sound or they not did the eq curve that normal eq does, that's not what I expect them to do.They makes me work more to fix the "problem" that they create.
    I know most people like these famous eqs, but it just doesn't work for me.

  • @TheGarageRecordingSC
    @TheGarageRecordingSC 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video, and I must admit, I have been sold a couple of times by slick marketing. I just signed up for the pre-order for your course. I feel relatively confident in my EQ ability, but I feel like there’s something that I could learn from you. Looking forward to the course launch. 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @flavmusicman
    @flavmusicman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Have to agree on the ST Bender , can never use that on Master Bus , but their Limiter lives on the Master and does what no other Limiter Comp can do.

  • @interaktiveaudio
    @interaktiveaudio 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Totally right good job …..who,want to understand. Is welcome

  • @user-vb4ou7mk3g
    @user-vb4ou7mk3g หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for doing Gods work

  • @aatreybhatt1999
    @aatreybhatt1999 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I use analog style EQs more for tone shaping
    Then use a proper EQ when I wanna be more surgical

  • @michaelmonroe8314
    @michaelmonroe8314 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As an engineer who has developed audio circuits for industrial products in the past, I agree in nature that ones focus should be on most effective use of tools, not purchasing this years hot plugin. I take exception with the general assertion that passive devices and simple semiconductors would not have affect on signals passed though them. Engineers need to consider the effects of Johnson noise- thermal noise on all of the devices that you referenced as fully linear, as a matter of daily practice when designing high performance equipment.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      for radio or audio? i never considered this for audio but i'm not an electronics engineer despite being familiar with a soldering iron

  • @user-px9tb1iw4v
    @user-px9tb1iw4v 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    i been knew this and thats why i always make my compressors for scratch in ableton.....

  • @yannickriedl4226
    @yannickriedl4226 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Would absolutely love more content on transformers and amplifiers! nice one.

  • @fromherebeyond
    @fromherebeyond 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for this video.
    I feel like something like this would be pretty interesting with synths, filters and effects as well.

  • @deerejohn1507
    @deerejohn1507 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The only reason I like using different plugins on different sources is the Q. I don’t like tweaking parametric EQ plug-ins all day I mix 150-200 songs/year so I work fast.

  • @user-oe9ng9hw6y
    @user-oe9ng9hw6y 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    These videos are causing quite a stir. Nothing like shaking up the establishment.

  • @immtonmischer
    @immtonmischer 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The phase shift in the Curve Bender Plug-in likely comes from an anti-aliasing filter.
    BUT It could also be unique to the circuit of the hardware unit. When you measure older hardware you'll see these ripples quite often.
    Those can come from a transformer which (in principle) acts as a low pass filter and the ripple comes from the transformers inner resistance interacting with frequency dependent changes in the impedance of the circuit.

  • @kylemccombmusic
    @kylemccombmusic 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Agree with everything except I think having some EQs for quick go-to "colors" can be useful. Pultec, Maag EQ4 (I use Luftikus, which is free), 1073 high end are about all I ever need. Just one/two knobs usually gets it pretty close.

  • @DycayBeats
    @DycayBeats 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I'll never be the same after watching this video...

  • @JohnnysaidWhat
    @JohnnysaidWhat 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The delta is usually small. When you pay for that extra 5% more of sparkle, warmth, whatever, it’s coming at a premium.
    It’s great that free stuff gets very close

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      it's not nulling because i'm closely matching it but not investing huge amounts of time to get it perfect. just because there's a tiny difference it doesn't mean that difference is exclusively comprised of some kind of magic

    • @JohnnysaidWhat
      @JohnnysaidWhat 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@APMastering its not magic, it’s a combination of subtle distortion, phasing modeled after whatever hardware the company studied. UA does a ton of research in these areas.
      Engineers use these tools because it got them results they could record to tape faster, meaning less time wasted when the talent was ready to roll.
      Sure we can recreate these curves ourselves to save money, but some us of just want a few simple knobs and get on with making albums.
      ✌️

    • @ABbruh
      @ABbruh 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      “Sparkle, warmth, whatever”. You’re paying for snake oil and confirmation bias.

    • @JohnnysaidWhat
      @JohnnysaidWhat 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ABbruh sure

    • @tulip_hysteria
      @tulip_hysteria 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ABbruh tell that to guitarists lol

  • @louisalfred3
    @louisalfred3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As an engineer from the “old studio days” with large format consoles, I can tell you that the sound of music was more about rooms, mics, production and arrangements and the sound of the musicians you simply needed to know how to record and mix. You didn’t need lots of channels. As the needs of production changed the technology adapted. I am not so sure Phil Ramone, would have traded his “small board” for a box full of modern tech just because it was new and advanced. I had the pleasure of watching him work as a producer. These days it is more about “convenience” technology. Or so it seems. I will also tell you that engineering is or was indeed creative and you didn’t choose a piece of gear because of who could or couldn’t hear the difference its about whether or not it helped you (as an engineer) do your best work. Your gear imparted a “sound” for a specific purpose. Pultec on a kick? Yes please. Why use a dbx 160x on it instead of the 160? Sometimes yes sometimes no it depended. Did what you do meet what your client wanted and represented the artist best. I remember working on the first SSL digital console (Quad Studios NYC) where every knob and switch was digital it was supposed to usher in a new era (eliminate the hassle of doing recalls) sonically it was trash. Twice as expensive as the expensive analog boards (SSL) you pictured and it was garbage. Low end wasn’t right. So while on one hand all the analysis is great the other is if the “tools” don’t inspire you to do your best work what is the point? And vice versa. I am all for “truth” in tech but some notions like “the listener won’t care or can’t hear” and therefore “it doesn’t matter” are a bit reckless and heavy handed. It’s like saying they can’t tell the difference between a strat or custom les paul or an ovation and a J200 so tell the musician they can get the same results playing a guitar from Walmart and they are crazy to spend thousands if not tens of thousands on their instruments. A guitar is a guitar and has 6 strings.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      most people can clearly hear a huge difference between a walmart guitar and a high end acoustic. almost nobody can hear the difference between a pultec and a 1:1 match in pro q. that's why abx tests are so important to dispel the nonsense

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      also ive worked on SSL 4k, neve VR, otari and audient consoles and love recording and mixing on large format consoles, especially SSL. that says nothing about sound though

    • @louisalfred3
      @louisalfred3 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@APMastering my point was completely about sound and not whether the tech is the mist current and further whether or not you can identify the sound of a device in the context of a mix is a valid position to take versus whether or not the device actually helps you to “create”. The idea is are you letting tech and what an audience will discern drive your creative decisions vs what you think the correct application of a tool is so you do your best work. Not because of its price tag whether cheap or expensive, why use a Pultec at all when you can get “lows” from the board eq on a Mackie 1604? Or more in context an SSL has 50hz and all kinds of frequencies no need for a pultec and yet they are not the same.

  • @luancarlosop
    @luancarlosop 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    8:11 - I don't agree with this view, especially when we talk about timbre and not "corrections".
    It was these tones of these "strange curves" that made the tones of several famous records, and going after this is an aesthetic choice, it has nothing to do with correction. It's that sound of that strange 400hz frequency that is resonant because of that strange curve.
    Digital only exists today because engineers suffered from what they had before. Today digital is here, but what was produced before is part of humanity's collective imagination, so going after these strange curves is more like a timbral repertoire than having an equalizer that can take any frequency without any type of phase change.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      i would bet an original pultec that if dark side or the moon was recorded using another EQ instead of a pultec, it would have had no statistically significant correlation with record sales... but unfortunately we dont have time machines and parallel universes so we cant put it to the test. But do you really think that pink floyd and alan parsons would have all ground to a halt in the studio without one? they could have recorded darkside any gear you like and it would have still been great music and made every one involved rich

    • @luancarlosop
      @luancarlosop 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@APMastering I agree, but I don't talk about the physical equipment, so much so that I'm in favor of simulations or presets.
      And of course, the sound they made at that time would be what we seek today. It's not about what he would do in a hypothetical situation in which he would have access to today's equipment, but rather what he did with what he had, and the result that made it. He wrote the timbre that defined the style, with what he have. And today, we use and pursue it in an aesthetic way. Why would I use a gated reverb, if it weren't to imitate the sound of Phil Collins, for example? It's the same logic with the Pultec equalization curve, or an SSL Console. Giants built what we tried to replicate digitally, And if there's a plugin that claims to simulate what they had at the time (regardless of what they would us today or with access to modern equipment in the 70s), I'll use it to get that tone they got. I don't want to have to bend over Q factor or look at the phase graph, if that makes my job easier.
      If I want to imitate their sound, I need to, at the very least, understand how they recorded and mixed it to replicate it. And it's not about using a 10 thousand dollar passive equalizer.

  • @g.e.miller4335
    @g.e.miller4335 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So they all give you the same result, but what about the experience of using them? Are they all equal in terms of how intuitive they are to use, how enjoyable, how easy, how fast, how they are laid out in terms of understandably? Or does one give you more satisfaction in the operation of it? I can run Microsoft WORD on a Windows computer or on a Mac and I’m going to be able to type the same letter in the same way and get exactly the same result - but I emphatically prefer using a Mac. A $2.3 million dollar Ferrari Daytona SP3 will get you to Walmart and so will a 12 year old Kia. Same distance, same speed, exact same destination - but the experience of driving the two cars are worlds apart. Do all equalizers give you exactly the same experience, or are some Ferraris and some Kia’s?

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      i think FF Q2 it's like a ferrari and all these analog modelling plugins are like soviet era state cars

  • @RolandDeschain1
    @RolandDeschain1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    That Swedish producer who does the 'Snake Oil' videos would definitely approve of this.

    • @Fastvoice
      @Fastvoice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      You mean Wytse? He's from the Netherlands.

    • @joeking9760
      @joeking9760 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And an idiot.

    • @SMOMEGA1
      @SMOMEGA1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The one with painted nails 💅

    • @digitaldice4649
      @digitaldice4649 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I think u are taking about the guy from White Sea studio

    • @Whiteseastudio
      @Whiteseastudio 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Definitely dutch

  • @simonbarth3181
    @simonbarth3181 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In all the examples where you played music, I could always tell them apart 100% and enjoyed the emulated hardware more. And I don't even use emulated EQs, I only use FabFilter. I think now I have to do some serious blind testing. Thanks a lot, you sold me on the stupid thing you wanted me not to buy, lol. I wonder what it is though, maybe some sort of distortion in the frequency band or phase shifts? I truly don't know....

    • @sparella
      @sparella 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's great. As long as you're taking the time to make an informed decision, you get to decide where the diminishing returns threshold is.

  • @DarkSideofSynth
    @DarkSideofSynth 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Yeah but... my bits are better than your bits. The way I make the current flow in the transistors is soooo special, so... warm! Besides, my coders use a very special IDE made by an advanced alien race in a galaxy far far away, and the compiler comes from the distilled tears of elves shed every 432 years during a full-moon night when Mars is alligned with Jupiter, and my pixels guarantee a brightness level yours can only dream of. 🥳 Only this way you can produce tracks which win 20 Grammies a year! Guaranteed!

  • @joelhume1
    @joelhume1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I actually agree with the premise of this video, however the delta on half of these null tests was audible on my iPhone on the other side of the kitchen while cooking my toddler breakfast as he’s smashing stuff in the next room…These subtitle differences add up.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you were listening to the drop in noise right? there is an initial noise burst which is "before" and then I engage the cancelation EQ and it nulls significantly and that is "after" which is more quiet. If you meant that, then I guess you just dont think it is good enough, thats fine

    • @joelhume1
      @joelhume1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@APMastering yeah, I understand the test. I just don’t think the delta was all that quiet when it’s still pretty audible from my phone.

    • @samchoate1719
      @samchoate1719 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@joelhume1I’m with you. I’m on cheap Bluetooth earbuds and I was surprised at the claim being made because I could clearly still hear noise after the phase flip on most of them. A “null” test would mean there is no difference. While there might be less difference than advertised, it isn’t scientific to say there is no difference. If I remember correctly, it was the Harrison EQ that was quietest and most likely a perfect null. The others… varying degrees of sound made it past after the polarity was flipped, so not a null.

  • @OLLiGoldeaux
    @OLLiGoldeaux 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I started recording as a teen in the 80s. Gear was expensive and rar - the first MiDi gear appears and also the Multitrack Recorders. The noise from analog gear was horrible, 8 Tracks from Tape thru a "cheap" Mixer sounds like a Day at the beach. The beautiest "analog/warm" sound i knew from the last years is "Be the one" by Dua Lipa - and there were no analog Equiment used, afaik. I took the thing which sounds good - the "warm" comes from the Midrange - which is often masked by too loud Drums, Basses, Reverbs - mix first the Midrange, and put the others later with low volume together - and: wait, give your ears the chance - the best sounding knob is often the "off" switch.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      i share a less is more approach for many things

  • @richardthelionheart01
    @richardthelionheart01 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    To be sure, you are correct.
    BUT... I think people who buy several EQ's etc are essentially buying the presets. Honestly. Getting the Abbey Road stuff, it's the painstakingly made presets and room impulses that match say, many Beatles recordings. Or using CLA or Schepps - it's the same. They are basically buying CLA's presets and settings. Could you make things sound the same with stock plug ins? Yes - but you may not have the experience and skill to achieve those settings.
    Also - to match industry standards - you have high end studios with everything going through 'old blue boxes' and then to digital, etc. Buying your favorite artists signature eq I suppose is a way to 'get there' for the most part in the home studio/hobbyist market.
    But yes, a digital parametric with a boost, Q, and frequency will be the same boost Q frequency across the board with out any additional flavoring.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      sure. however, i dont like presets. i just use EQ in the way i need

  • @ktreier
    @ktreier 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It seems you chose EQ curves for each test that you were able to create a null with. For example with the Pultec you didn’t seem to have any cut/boost at the low end that supposedly creates that famous Pultec sound. Nor did you overdrive the signal to create any non-linearity. It felt like you applied settings to achieve your hypothesis. If the goal was to show (in the linear) region all EQ’s are the same I’d not argue, but certain EQ’s are chosen because of their non-linearity. I’d love to see @DanWorrall comment here. He previously showed that a Harrison Channel strip EQ would null with a Reaper stock plugin.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      i talk about distortion at the end of the video. as for the pultec, i DID do the famous boost cut thing but I did it in the mids and not in the bass. I could have done it in the bass but I didnt think it would matter if i used the cut/boost on the right or on the left, they are both the cut/boost thing

    • @joeromersa
      @joeromersa 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sooo… you picked a pultec for the test and somehow didn’t do the only thing pultecs are known for?

    • @ktreier
      @ktreier 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@joeromersa he’s not not the first to show in the linear region almost all EQ’s are the same, but that’s not really the point of analog modeled EQ’s. It’s behavior when operating in the region of non-linearity why you might purchase a Pultec or SSL Channel Strip.

  • @RolandDeschain1
    @RolandDeschain1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Please do more of these videos. Mainly compressors.

    • @anthonybrett
      @anthonybrett 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep. Compressors have almost become a "religion" unto themselves. I've never seen so many people get so excited about a VCA hooked up to an envelope follower.

  • @FRANKMUSIKOFFICIAL
    @FRANKMUSIKOFFICIAL 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Does this apply to hardware mastering EQ's too?

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      its more complex here. half the EQs are designed to be as transparent.as possible (maselec etc), in which case it sounds like fab filter but in a box, and the other half (manley etc) are designed to have secret magic harmonic something or other

    • @FRANKMUSIKOFFICIAL
      @FRANKMUSIKOFFICIAL 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@APMasteringfreaking amazing. Love your presets on the Elevate plug-in. Use them all the time in conjunction with out things. I appreciate you not being a wimp like most music you tube channels because they don’t want to hurt the feelings of their pay masters. No pun intended. Keep up the great work. You got my sub.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@FRANKMUSIKOFFICIAL wait, what? I didn't make any presets for any plugins... maybe there is someone else with my name? confused lol

  • @united100
    @united100 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I had fun watching your video....., you're right, I noticed a long time ago that EQ plugins always sound the same, there is no magic , only mathematics and maketing :)

  • @1loveMusic2003
    @1loveMusic2003 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've spent thousands on plugins and came to realize very quickly that the stock plugins with Studio One give me pretty much everything I need. Wish I knew that at the beginning. All of the analog crap they sell us was considered a flaw back in the day like noise and distortion.

  • @vigilantestylez
    @vigilantestylez 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I watched your recent video on analog emulating plugins and their supposed inability to pass null tests compared to basic free digital EQs. While your efforts to demystify audio processing tools are appreciated, there are several inaccuracies and false assumptions in your analysis that need addressing.
    1."Testing the Delta between two signals is like Kryptonite to people who believe in the audio industry marketing hype because it's cold hard scientific fact."
    WRONG. Null tests have limitations. They are useful for identifying differences between signals, but they do not account for the nonlinear characteristics and subtle harmonic distortions introduced by analog emulating plugins. These plugins often aim to reproduce the nonlinearities and harmonic content of analog gear, which may not null perfectly with a basic digital EQ.
    2. "Analog emulating plugins often consist of resistors, capacitors, and inductors, which are linear components. Linear meaning no saturation."
    WRONG AGAIN. While resistors, capacitors, and inductors are indeed linear components, the unique sound of analog gear often comes from the nonlinear behavior of transformers and amplifiers, which are not considered in your null tests. These components introduce harmonic distortion and saturation, which are crucial to the analog sound.
    3. "We take the same white noise with a non-fancy EQ or just a regular EQ and we phase flip it, so if it nulls significantly, then you know that it's pretty much more or less the same."
    Analog emulation plugins may introduce complex phase shifts and slight timing differences that simple null tests cannot capture. These phase behaviors are often a part of the analog character that these plugins aim to replicate. Matching phase with an all-pass filter does not fully replicate the intricate phase behavior of analog gear.
    4. "EQs basically all just sound the same and the plugin interfaces just fool you into thinking that they sound different when they don't."
    This is your confirmation bias, assuming that all EQs sound the same if used correctly. However, analog emulating plugins often introduce subtle but perceptible differences due to their design, which might be significant in specific mixing and mastering contexts. Dismissing these differences outright overlooks the nuanced qualities that many engineers and producers value.
    Your testing methodology has significant flaws. Firstly, it's essential not only to test white noise but also actual music across the entire mix, as the nuances of analog emulation often become more apparent when applied to all channels and buses. Secondly, measuring harmonics using a tool like Plugin Doctor is crucial, rather than relying solely on a null test. Even if the null test doesn't reveal differences to the ear, the meter may still indicate discrepancies, and different sounds can make these differences audible. Analyzing phase shifts is also necessary. Moreover, conducting double-blind listening tests with a varied group of listeners could determine if they can distinguish between a mix using analog-emulating plugins and one using free stock digital tools. Testing the plugins in real-world mixing and mastering scenarios is also advisable. While some analog emulations may be subpar, they're not all inferior, and replicating their sound with a sterile digital EQ is not always possible. Sometimes, even if it is possible, the workflow with analog emulations is more efficient, allowing for quick adjustments rather than spending extensive time matching curves. This efficiency is why companies like SSL release clean digital channel strips and EQs; the appeal lies in the characteristic curves and compressor response. If needed, saturation can be added, often with just a touch of tape saturation. Simplifying the process can enhance creativity, and using a channel strip or a DAW like Mixbus PRO, which offers a superior workflow and speed, allows for more creative decisions that elevate the mix. Concerning analog-emulating plugins, the goal is often to achieve a particular sound swiftly and consistently, rather than spending excessive time EQ matching with an inadequate digital EQ.

  • @synapticschism
    @synapticschism 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I hope you can agree that there are features that make some plugins unique in their funcionality. Two examples are Scaler EQ and Surfer EQ. I'm not debating or rejecting the results of the null tests, those are not up for debate, and I use only 3 EQs not for their sound but their functionality. However, I think that functionality or usability features matter when choosing plugins.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      100%, which is why i recommend nova

  • @jorgejordan8865
    @jorgejordan8865 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I mean if it helps me get the job done, then whats the problem, you still have them and use them here and there. Like you can recreate a curve in any dynamic EQ, thats pretty known but if I have an EQ that can help me get there quicker than just wasting my time finessing Pro Q3, then Ill opt for that EQ

  • @jeremylarue4503
    @jeremylarue4503 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My only argument is something I heard from Dan Worrall. Using an analog style eq forces you to use your ears, seeing weird curves on a frequency spectrum can make you doubt your ears because it "looks wrong". However, I use Pro Q 3 for everything, it's clean digital, no cramping and fully featured.

  • @DavidGalardiPro
    @DavidGalardiPro 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is awesome, thank you!

  • @PatrickStefan
    @PatrickStefan 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think the limitations of older stuff facilitated creativity. I’m a musician so that works for me but if you’re mixing / mastering perhaps less so. I recorded in a studio with pretty much all pre 1970s mics & pres and it sounded unbelievable - to my ear anyway. Modern gear can be really harsh sounding and that’s why I like slapping tape emulators / saturators with HF roll off on.
    Re: EQ I’m with you on the marketing but when I use my Pultec it’s feels more creative than ProQ3 (I use both for different jobs)

  • @saucebyte3196
    @saucebyte3196 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Man..thank u so gawd damn much!!! You are a hero now, no mistaking it

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      thanks for watching!

  • @sf6657
    @sf6657 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well, I’m not sure how I stumbled upon your videos but this is the third one I’m commenting on. All on the same day. I rarely ever comment on youtube videos.
    I think you’re brave for taking this on. I’ve had conversations like this many times over the years. About many different facets of music creation, production and technologies. There are a lot of folks out there who’s egos and careers and livelihoods are tied to being the ones who CAN see the emperor’s new cloths. People tend to get defensive.
    As you pointed out, great music has been created under very primitive conditions in decades past. And in decades present.
    Botton line: It’s about the music. If your music is crap it doesn’t matter how much money you spend on recording equipment or mastering. If you’re a recordist or engineer, learn how to recognize what can be improved sonically and use what ever tools you have available. It’s a gift for some and others have to work harder at it.
    In the end, Content is king.
    I enjoy your videos. I think you’ll improve the confidence of some young artists who may be intimidated by the Emperor’s New Clothes.

  • @ayoubmisbah2190
    @ayoubmisbah2190 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Don t by a plugin . Just by my eq corse 😂😂😂

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      sure, its cheaper than buying an expensive plugin and I teach it with nova which is free. then you will have EQ and the knowledge to use it for less than fab filter

  • @TaureanMixing
    @TaureanMixing 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    It's not just EQ's. Even some saturators and enhancers can be made to sound like each other OR at the very least so close in quality that some insane prices that some of them go for are completely unwarranted. I recently posted a blind comparison at Gearslutz of several good saturators versus Cranesong's Phoenix II going for $500! I got maybe 3 or 4 responses but 100s upon 100s of downloads. When it comes to actually listening and putting their money where their mouth is, most of those claiming the superiority of such a ridiculously priced plugin are no where to be found. They just keep rambling empty "opinions" about it with a dash of elitist tone. And Phoenix in and of itself doesn't sound bad, but let's get real.

    • @APMastering
      @APMastering  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      the feeling I get from gearslutz is that there are coordinated efforts by manufacturers or financially interested parties to dogpile anyone who doesnt lick the boots of whoever or whatever is profitable for them. This is why I'm basically just watching and waiting until my channel starts getting plagued by trolls in a coordinated discrediting campaign. I've got an extremely thick skin though so will probably just find it funny when it happens if anything

    • @TaureanMixing
      @TaureanMixing 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@APMastering Thick skin is good for this kind of stance my friend. I say keep at it. Truth is the truth. And 100% agreed about Gearslutz.

  • @nekrodamusas
    @nekrodamusas 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Doing gods work, thank you