Tal Vocoder 2 Vst Plugin 64 Bit

 
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  4. Tal Vocoder Vst
  • In closing, Vocoder is by all means a powerful and well designed plugin that you can safely and easily use to create and enhance a vocoder effect. VST plugin FFT analysis Internal.
  • Now that Wavosaur can work natively on 64 bit systems, we need some 64 bit VST plugin effects that are full 64 bit. Many of the free VST plugins are still 32 bit, but we have found some nice 64 bit plugins, for your needs: compressor, limiter, reverb, equalizer, filter, distorsion!
This is part 4 of a multi-part tutorial on setting up vocoder plugins in Cubase. See part 1 if you missed the introduction.

The Hadron plugin is your ultimate granular synthesis tool. In fact it is such a complete implementation of granular synthesis we’ve renamed the technique to particle synthesis. The plugin is of course free and open source.


TAL-Vocoder is a free vintage vocoder emulation produced by one of my favorite indie plugin publishers, Togu Audio Line. While I'm not 100% certain, I think TAL-Vocoder might be the only free vocoder plugin that is available in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors. This plugin only offers VST 2 format, not VST 3, meaning that configuring it for external carrier use is very different from what you do with Waldorf Lector or XILS V+. We're going to take a look at two different configurations: One using TAL-Vocoder's built-in synth engine as the carrier, and another using an external carrier.
The screenshots below use the Vocoder Tutorial Projects that you can download at the Ultimate Outsider Downloads page.

USING TAL-VOCODER'S INTERNAL CARRIER

In this configuration we'll use TAL-Vocoder's built-in synthesizer as the carrier. This means we need an audio track or group channel to serve as the modulator (voice), and a MIDI track to play the carrier signal on the plugin's synth. The Vocoder Internal Carrier demo project in the tutorial projects download is already set up for this.

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  1. In the Vocoder Internal Carrier demo project (or your own Cubase project), add TAL-Vocoder as an insert on the audio track or group channel you wish to use as your modulator. (If you are using a group channel in a Cubase project of your own, make sure that your modulator source's output is not routed to Cubase's 'Stereo Out,' because if it is, then you will always hear the raw modulator audio mixed in with TAL-Vocoder's outputs.)
  2. The default preset, A Voice Robot 1, is a good one to begin with.
  3. On your MIDI track's inspector, route the track's MIDI output to your TAL-Vocoder instance, as shown here:
  4. IMPORTANT: TAL-Vocoder is quite loud at its default settings. Dial back the volume of your Modulator Audio track to around -12db before continuing. If you're using a preset with the CHORUS feature toggled on, dial back a little further, like -15db or so to avoid clipping.
  5. Begin playback on a section of your project that loops your modulator and carrier tracks. You should now hear a vocoded harmony line. There isn't any visual feedback in TAL-Vocoder except for a single clipping LED.
PluginIf you followed along using the tutorial project, the result should sound like this:

USING AN EXTERNAL CARRIER


In this configuration, we'll pass audio signals for both modulator and carrier. The Vocoder External Carrier demo project includes an audio clip to use for the carrier, but the carrier could be a VST instrument as well if you have programmed MIDI that matches your audio material. Instead of using a sidechain input for carrier audio like we're able to do with Waldorf Lector and XILS V+, TAL-Vocoder has to sit on a single stereo track or group that uses the left and right channels to carry the modulator and carrier audio separately.
Vocoder
  1. In the Vocoder External Carrier demo project (or your own Cubase project), select Project > Add Track > Group Channel and create a Stereo group named TAL-Vocoder.
  2. Add TAL-Vocoder as an insert on the newly-created group channel.
  3. I like the preset B Voice Robot Harmonic for this configuration.
  4. Click the Input Mode On button so that the green LED is lit.
  5. Pan your Modulator Audio channel all the way to the right and route the track's audio output to the TAL-Vocoder group.
  6. If you're using an audio track or group channel as your carrier signal, select that track in Cubase. In the Carrier track's inspector, pan it all the way to the left and route its output to the TAL-Vocoder group.
    Otherwise, if you are using a VST plugin as your carrier, open the MixConsole, and on the channel strip where your plugin resides, pan the track to the left and change the output routing to the TAL-Vocoder group channel.
  7. Some of the TAL-Vocoder presets can be pretty loud. Dial back the volume of your TAL-Vocoder group track to at least -6db before continuing.
  8. Begin playback on a section of your project that loops your modulator and carrier tracks. If you hear distortion, you might have to check the levels of your group channel, the modulator, or the carrier. If you don't hear anything, make sure the green Input Mode On button is pressed (I've noticed it sometimes toggles off when switching presets).
If you followed along using the tutorial project, the result should sound like this:

Conclusion

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If you were successful in following the above use cases, you should now be able to jump in and explore TAL-Vocoder's various features.
In the next part of this tutorial, we'll set up Image-Line Vocodex..

Tal Vocoder 2 Vst Plugin 64 Bit Pc

TAL publishes experimental Linux VST2 versions of its popular plugins including TAL BassLine 101, U-NO-LX, Sampler & more.

Software is probably the second biggest topic in music tech after hardware. The big soft topic is, of course, the market of plugins and apps. It is almost normal for us media publishers that they work with Windows and/or Mac. However, we should not forget the Linux market of music production and sound creation tools. Why am I writing this? Simple!

TAL (Togu Audio Line) has today released “experimental” Linux VST plugin releases of its plugins including TAL-101 BassLine-101, TAL-U-NO-LX and more. In my opinion, that’s great, especially because TAL plugins have an excellent price-performance factor. Thus, they greatly enrich the market for Linux VST plugins.

Even better, the free plugins TAL-Reverb-4 and TAL-Chorus-LX are also available as Linux plugins. But be careful, these are alpha/beta versions which includes bugs and errors. The following instrument & effect plugins are now available in native Linux VST2.4 x64 format:

  • TAL-BassLine-101
  • TAL-U-NO-LX
  • TAL-MOD
  • TAL-Sampler
  • TAL-DAC
  • TAL-Dub-X
  • TAL-Reverb-4 (free).
  • TAL-Chorus-LX (free).

TAL Linux VST2 plugins are available now for testing and ready for download from the official website. Best high quality free vst. Bpm counter vst plugin.

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More information here: Togu Audio Line (TAL)