
Desk is a universal binary AU plugin to turn your DAW into a real mixing desk. It goes on every channel, every buss, every output- everywhere- and turns digital math into very clean console sound. +18db headroom. Not a fuzz tone or tape sim. No mud. Desk is
$49.99.
Here's how and why it works.
Very few things in real life, whether acoustic or electrical, are really mathematically perfect. Air compresses, circuits distort, everything becomes nonlinear- yet DAWs, even ones as nice as Logic, remain entirely linear. That's great to build on, but it compels people to throw all sorts of tape emulations etc. at the problem.
Desk takes both signal level and slew rate and makes them nonlinear. You could say it warps the reality of your DAW! But unlike tape and distortion effects, Desk is not designed to distort at 0 db. Its headroom is a solid 18 db or so above zero, like a real console- and it isn't meant to sound great when run into blatant distortion, any more than real consoles do. (Hit a buss hard if you really want the sound of stressed hardware.)
Instead, Desk builds on the lessons learned by the popular freebie Channel, setting up a nonlinearity that is super gentle. If you don't have really good monitoring, you might not hear any effect from just one copy of Desk in the signal path- nor should you- this isn't about dirt, it's about clarity and reality.
But when you have Desk on every channel and every buss and every output- hitting at least two and sometimes three or more in some routings- that's when things start to gel and sound not like a DAW anymore. Desk is set up to handle any type of sound, even very dense bright sounds. It's not just for dirty rock music, it's totally versatile. It lends itself to old school use of gain staging- record stuff at its intended level in the mix and everything will fall together incredibly easily, without ever sounding like you used fake digital 'warming'.
Desk does not supply its own safety limiter or clipper- again, its headroom is something like 18 db over DAW output clipping (thanks to Logic's floating point busses). If you need to hit the output buss in such a way that it overdrives, you can use ShortBuss for a fatter sound (the output should place Desk before ShortBuss) or ADClip for a cleaner, harder sound- or indeed any other saturation or limiter plugin you like. Bear in mind that ShortBuss and ADClip don't apply the slew nonlinearity that Desk applies, so you still need a Desk instance in there first to get the full effect.
Desk is such a great idea that I'm selling it for $50, not $60, to get it into more people's hands. It's like Channel, to the Nth degree- and can help people get effective satisfying mixes without processing everything to death, which I consider a fine goal (even though I still sell a million plugins for when you DO want to process everything to death) :)
Try the demo of this by
downloading the demo collection! You're not allowed to use the demo for actual work. It politely mutes itself briefly every couple minutes, and that's the only thing it does to spite you. It won't expire or do anything to you, and when you get the actual plugin, throw away the demo and put the real version in its place and most software should replace saved instances of the demo with the real thing seamlessly, retaining any settings. Please support my cooperative, unhostile demos with sales of the real software.
Unprocessed 24 bit example files | Emulation 24 bit example files | This hi-res stuff is hosted at Mediafire.com