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FIG. 1: Concert Hall is one of seven plug-ins included with the Lexicon PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle. The default, basic mode of operation is shown here.
Lexicon's high-end, hardware-based reverb units have populated upscale studios for more than three decades. Now the venerable company has ported algorithms from its lauded PCM96 to a bundle of cross-platform plug-ins.
Available in AU, RTAS, and VST formats (iLok required), the PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle comprises seven different reverb plug-ins: Chamber, Concert Hall, Hall, Plate, Random Hall, Room, and Vintage Plate (see Fig. 1). Mono, dual-mono, and stereo configurations of each plug-in are included. Hundreds of outstanding stock presets will whet your appetite, but each plug-in also offers a glut of highly editable parameters so you can roll (and store) your own. I tested Version 1.04 of the AU plug-ins in MOTU Digital Performer 6.02 (DP) using an 8-core Mac Pro running Mac OS X 10.5.4.
ENTERING SPACE
The GUIs are almost identical for all plug-ins here, differing only in the number of parameters (and their controls) offered. Each plug-in has several different preset categories, some including more than just reverbs. Concert Hall offers users a choice of different-sized halls, rooms, and effects, such as ambience and delays. Choose the category you want, and then select from dozens of presets in that category. If you wish, you can then adjust the values of nine different effect parameters using sliders in the GUI.
FIG. 2: Full-edit mode allows you to assign any parameter to each control slider by way of a dropdown menu (seen here overlaying roughly the center of the GUI).
The parameter assignments for the sliders are initially preset. Click on the Edit button, however, and you enter full-edit mode, in which you can assign any one of dozens of parameters to each slider using a dropdown menu (see Fig. 2). These parameters range from the expected (pre-delay, reverb time, and diffusion) to the arcane (tap slope, spin, and wander).
The GUI's Soft Row control strip offers fast access to groups of closely related parameters. For example, the four Soft Row parameter groups for the Plate plug-in are Input & Mix, Reverb, Reflections, and Echoes. Click on the Input & Mix button to access sliders for adjusting wet/dry mix, pre-delay, diffusion, shape, and spread.
Another control section lets users independently tweak one band of equalization and relative levels of early reflections and the reverb tail. Filter types include low- and highpass (single- or double-pole), bandpass, and notch. Bandpass and notch filters include bandwidth controls.
A Shelf control modifies the effect's frequency response. For example, with Shelf turned off, a 2-pole lowpass filter rolls off highs at a rate of 12dB/octave ad infinitum. But as you raise the shelf control, the roll-off levels off at a progressively lower frequency. In this way, you can limit the filter's degree of attenuation to a fixed maximum above a frequency you choose.
A defeatable real-time display shows three dynamic analyses of the reverb: traditional wideband RTA, multiband (split into five frequency bands), and impulse response (essentially a waveform view). I/O meters, defeatable balloon help, and a Compare function (which toggles between the edited and default states for the current preset) aid your sonic sculpting.
TESTS IN ORBIT
Each of the plug-ins demanded roughly the same amount of CPU power, which was surprisingly little. I liked how the GUIs let me choose how simple or complex I wished operation to be: I could recall a preset and make a few ground-level tweaks, or jockey a cockpit brimming with controls where the sky was the limit. That said, documentation for some of the more unusual parameters was so vague that I was left scratching my head.
The PCM Native Reverb Plug-in Bundle produces realistic-sounding and superb-quality plate, chamber, hall, and room reverbs (see Web Clip 1). Additionally, Concert Hall and Room both offer excellent ambience and delay presets, which sound awesome on vocal tracks. In Room, delays comprise multiple reflections, whereas delays for Concert Hall are discrete (until they pass through the algorithm's input diffuser). http://emusician.com/web_clips_streaming/lexicon_pcm_native_WC1Vintage Plate and Room include some gated and reverse reverb presets, respectively, which sounded great on drums (see Web Clip 2). None of the plug-ins include gate-time parameters, so fashioning your own gated-reverb presets becomes somewhat roundabout. To create my own gated-plate preset, I had to edit several parameters—including reverb time, size, spread, shape, and tap slope—in the LexPlate plug-in. But once I got the hang of it, subsequent setup was fast due to the plug-ins' easy-to-navigate GUI. Note: Lexicon is considering adding a gated reverb into future plug-in processors.
I loved being able to sync the plug-ins' pre-delays and discrete reflections to DP's host tempo, using any of 13 different values ranging from half- to 32nd-notes. In fact, I could sync the pre-delay time for the overall effect (that is, how soon early reflections began to voice) to one note value and the delay time that separates early reflections from the reverb tail to another note value. Wow! I could also toggle between finite and infinite reverb times to create otherworldly vocal pads.
The plug-ins also let me set different reverb times for user-defined bass and mid-frequency bands. I could dampen highs over time or simply roll them off statically.
RETURN TO EARTH
Unfortunately, none of the plug-ins let you adjust a gate to dynamically transition between two different reverb times based on input-signal level. One application for such dynamic reverb programs is creating a reverb tail that explodes (dramatically increases in decay time) or implodes (dries up quickly) at the end of vocal phrases. Big sur jack kerouac pdf. My Lexicon PCM70 can do this, but the PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle cannot.
On a less-important note, none of the plug-ins include a master output-level control—a minor inconvenience. Also missing are Undo and Redo functions.
Even if you never touch any of the parameter controls, you're likely to be happy with the wide variety of sounds available from the plug-ins' outstanding presets. However, a thorough understanding of the effect parameters is important if you are going to use the plug-ins in mono-to-stereo configuration (feeding mono tracks to the plug-in and outputting stereo effects). This is because reflections for both left and right channels will only voice if fed signal from a stereo bus. Therefore, feeding the plug-in from a mono bus will throw the effect's imaging off to one side of the stereo field. This is not a defect of the software but a consequence of having independent control over gain for left and right reflections—a good thing.
I was happy to note that all of my stored custom presets could be accessed directly from the GUI's category and preset menus. Navigating to a folder on my hard drive wasn't necessary.
At $1,499, the Lexicon PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle is pricey as compared to other reverb plug-ins on the market. The plug-ins can't be bought separately. While the bundle doesn't quite offer all the features of some of the company's more upscale hardware-based products, its stellar sound quality is in the same league. For professional use, this is the reverb bundle to beat.
EM contributing editor Michael Cooper is the owner of Michael Cooper Recording in Sisters, Ore. Visit him at myspace.com/michaelcooperrecording.
Click on the Product Summary above to view the Lexicon PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle product page.
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For over 40 years Lexicon has been recognized as the gold standard of digital reverb and effects processing and has continuously introduced leading edge technology for the audio industry. Lexicon has again rocked the audio industry with a complete collection of the finest reverb plug-ins available. The PCM Native Reverb Plug-In Bundle is the ultimate reverb plug-in for creating professional, inspirational mixes within popular DAWs like Pro Tools, Logic, and any other AAX, VST, Audio Unit, or RTAS compatible platform.
With all the flexibility you would expect from a native plug-in, this powerhouse Bundle delivers 7 legendary Lexicon reverbs with hundreds of the most versatile and finely-crafted studio presets, including recognizable classics from Lexicon's immense library of sounds. Designed to bring the highest level of sonic quality and function to all your audio applications, the PCM Native Reverb Bundle will take center stage in your DAW.
Platform: MacOSX AU/VST/RTAS
Lexicon.PCM.Native.Reverb.Bundle.v1.3.6.MacOSX.MERRY.XMAS-HEXWARS
Lexicon.PCM.Native.Reverb.Bundle.v1.3.6.MacOSX.MERRY.XMAS-HEXWARS
- Software >Plug-in
Having wowed the professionals with their Native PCM and LXP reverb plug-ins, Lexicon now turn their attention to the financially challenged!
Available for VST, Audio Unit and RTAS hosts, Lexicon's MPX Native Reverb plug-in is based around the algorithms used in their popular MPX hardware series of reverb units, offering seven different reverb types and over 100 presets. It requires a second-generation iLok for security and installation, and should run under Windows 7, Vista and XP, or Mac OS X 10.5 or later on any Intel Mac. The plug-in can work in mono, mono-in/stereo-out and stereo-in/stereo-out modes.
Simple But Effective
I was pleased to see a very friendly user interface, with almost all the controls needed to do the job on show on the main panel — you click the arrow to the right of the controls to see the remaining three. All the parameter values are visible, and there's a real-time visualisation meter showing the reverb spectrum, should you wish to enjoy a little extra eye candy.
The seven reverb types on offer are Small Plate, Large Plate, Small Hall, Large Hall, Small Chamber, Large Chamber and Room. I was pleased to find that most of the presets provide sensible, musically useful settings rather than the familiar 'showing off but no use to anyone' variants we're often greeted by. There are no gated or reverse options here — just emulations of plates and various spaces.
The eight knobs on the main page control Reflection Level, Reverb Level, 'Color' Rolloff, Diffusion, Reverb Time, Pre-delay and Mix, while the three 'hidden' controls are for Reverb Type, Reflection and Reverb Attack. Reverb Type picks one of the seven types on offer, while Reflection adjusts the number of early reflections in the reverb pattern. Chrono trigger wad ntsc. Reverb Attack can be lengthened to emulate the sound of reverb as heard from the rear of a performance space, or shortened to provide a front-of-room ambience.
Presets are also arranged by category, which can be selected using the Category knob to the left of the panel or by the Category arrow, but to avoid cluttering the screen, when you select the preset list you see only the presets relevant to the chosen category. I found that when I opened the presets list and then moved the plug-in window, the preset list stayed where it originally opened. I don't know if this is a feature or a bug, but it does mean you can drag the plug-in away from the preset list to allow all the controls to remain visible.
Tails Of Glory
Like the Native PCM and LXP reverbs, MPX Native features an optional 'rainbow' frequency display.
Sonically, the reverbs aren't as dense or mellifluous as those produced by something like a PCM96, but if you're familiar with the mid-priced MPX units, you'll know what to expect. Though a little coarser than the more up-market PCM reverbs, their slightly grainy character produces a very familiar vintage Lexicon character that sits very comfortably in a mix. Lexicon reverbs have the ability to sound like a part of the source sound, rather than a layer of reverb superimposed on top, and that makes it much easier to use reverb in a mix without eating up all the space. The separate Reflection and Reverb controls allow the early reflection level to be balanced with the reverb tail, while the diffusion can be reduced to create a deliberately more grainy reverb when needed.
As you might expect, the medium spaces, such as rooms, chambers and plates, work well for routine pop work, although you can also reduce the reverb level and leave the reflections turned up to create more of an ambience effect. The smaller spaces are also useful for creating an ambience, while longer concert halls and cathedrals are included, should you need them. There are quite a few other decent algorithmic reverbs at the price, but MPX Native Reverb's big selling point is that it has the Lexicon sound. It's a significant step up from the reverbs bundled with most DAWs, and covers the standard reverb tasks very effectively.
Pros
- Affordable.
- Easy to use.
- Very usable, classic Lexicon reverb treatments.
Lexicon Pcm Native Reverb Bundle
Summary
MPX Native Reverb provides high-quality reverb suitable for most pop-music applications at a much lower cost than Lexicon's high-end Native range.
information
£204 including VAT.Sound Technology +44 (0)1462 480000.
$209.95.Lexicon Pro +1 801 568 7567.