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The most common, and very cool, use for convolution is for reverb. If you go to a place with a nice ambience, like your local church or your grandmother's bathroom, and you record the echo from a short loud click, you can convolve any other sound with the resulting impulse response (IR) and it will sound as if you were magically playing it in that location.

But that's not all you can do with Convolver. Because IRs are simply audio files, you can load any sample into Convolver to emulate anything from a simple guitar amp cabinet, to freaky filters, distinctive delays, and much more. To give you an idea, we've included over 300 factory IRs for a range of unique effects. And some reverbs, of course.

 

Features

  • Start - Cuts the start off the impulse response.
  • End - Cuts the end off the impulse response.
  • Fade In - Fades in the start of the impulse response.
  • Fade Out - Fades out the end of the impulse response.
  • Stretch - Stretches the impulse response, adjusting both it's length and pitch.
  • Reverse - Reverse the impulse response before processing.
  • Select Sample - Convolver comes with a large library of Impulse Responses that should cover many of your basic needs. But you can import any samples you want.
  • Delay - Set the pre-delay time in milliseconds or as a fraction of song tempo.
  • Tone - Adjusts the brightness of processed output.
  • Feedback - Feeds the processed output back into the convolution engine.
  • Mix - The dry/wet mix of this effect. A lower value will let some of the unmodified signal through.

Tech Specs

MAC

 

OS X MacOS

Memory: 1 GB

CPU: 2 GHz or faster

Plugins: VST-2, VST-3, AU, AAX

WINDOWS

 

Windows Windows 

Memory: 1 GB

CPU: 2 GHz or faster

Plugins: VST-2, VST-3, AAX

Kilohearts Convolver

C$53.00Price
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