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Post by henge on Feb 18, 2014 11:44:16 GMT -6
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Post by jcoutu1 on Feb 18, 2014 12:09:41 GMT -6
No Deal for the people with the little version this time.
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Post by henge on Feb 18, 2014 12:33:02 GMT -6
No Deal for the people with the little version this time. If you have Little Microshift it's $49. The regular price is $89.
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Post by henge on Feb 18, 2014 15:12:32 GMT -6
The focus function on this is very cool!!
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Post by WKG on Feb 18, 2014 17:30:36 GMT -6
No Deal for the people with the little version this time. If you have Little Microshift it's $49. The regular price is $89. Yup. I logged in to my account and the option to upgrade for $49 was next to Little Microshift. Nice that it's AAX 64 too.
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Post by jcoutu1 on Feb 18, 2014 18:31:14 GMT -6
There goes 50 bones I guess. Haha
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Post by jcoutu1 on Feb 28, 2014 13:07:53 GMT -6
I just picked this up at JRR using the group code. Best deal that I've found.
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Post by henge on Feb 28, 2014 13:50:20 GMT -6
I just picked this up at JRR using the group code. Best deal that I've found. What was the deal?
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Post by jcoutu1 on Feb 28, 2014 14:54:11 GMT -6
15% off. At JRRshop.com use the code: group
...works on almost everything in the store. I've only purchased software from them, but the code usually works on hardware too.
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Post by henge on Feb 28, 2014 15:33:02 GMT -6
15% off. At JRRshop.com use the code: group ...works on almost everything in the store. I've only purchased software from them, but the code usually works on hardware too. 15% off $49?
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Post by jcoutu1 on Feb 28, 2014 15:52:58 GMT -6
Yeah. So $41.65 total. Still waiting on my license though fwiw.
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Post by henge on Feb 28, 2014 16:22:43 GMT -6
Nice!! Great plug.Totally addictive...
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Post by kcatthedog on Feb 28, 2014 16:31:59 GMT -6
What does this plug do that the Ua phase alignment plug doesn't do ? Or is it for a different purpose ?
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Post by donr on Feb 28, 2014 23:39:55 GMT -6
What does this plug do that the Ua phase alignment plug doesn't do ? Or is it for a different purpose ?
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Post by donr on Mar 1, 2014 0:05:43 GMT -6
Microshift emulates a popular studio effect originally obtained with Eventide Harmonizer H910s, where a mono source panned center was sent to the 910 and a very subtle pitch shift up comes back on one side and another subtle pitch shift down comes up on the other side. You needed two of them to make it happen.
The result is a wide stereo version of the source, great on lead vocals, spacious like a chorus, but unlike a chorus, it doesn't sweep, it just 'beats' very slowly because of the subtle pitch difference. Sounds great and was all over late '70's rock records. The proper pitch control setting for the trick was so subtle [The harmonizer could shift an octave up or down] the led numerals for the pitch interval would flicker between 1.00 and 1.01. and 1.00 and 0.99
The H910 Harmonizer can be heard on the breakdown section in the studio version of BOC's "Godzilla." All the pitch effects are H910. We bought one for the road, it was in the FOH rack and would be operated by hand by the FOH mixer, George Geranious.
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Post by junior on Mar 1, 2014 4:06:46 GMT -6
15% off. At JRRshop.com use the code: group ...works on almost everything in the store. I've only purchased software from them, but the code usually works on hardware too. Thanks for the heads-up!
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Post by kcatthedog on Mar 1, 2014 6:56:02 GMT -6
thx donr so not a delay corrector at all but an effect to bring body to a signal ?
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Post by henge on Mar 1, 2014 7:16:09 GMT -6
thx donr so not a delay corrector at all but an effect to bring body to a signal ? Body,width and depth. The Microshift adds a Focus control that high passes the signal so you can choose which part of the spectrum gets effected! It also emulates some analog saturation.
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Post by donr on Mar 1, 2014 11:34:41 GMT -6
thx donr so not a delay corrector at all but an effect to bring body to a signal ? Body,width and depth. The Microshift adds a Focus control that high passes the signal so you can choose which part of the spectrum gets effected! It also emulates some analog saturation. It's a pitch shift that creates a doubling effect with the source. There may be a Haas type time effect too, the original Harmonizer had latency creating the pitched output. I've only used the Little Microshift so far. If you try the Microshift, you'll immediately recognize the sound, you've heard it on recordings for decades.
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Post by Bob Olhsson on Mar 1, 2014 11:41:28 GMT -6
The Yamaha SPX 90 had this effect too.
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Post by donr on Mar 1, 2014 12:01:13 GMT -6
There's plenty of ways to do this trick, the H910 was just the first. By the time digital multi-effects exploded just about every effects box could do it. In the '80's you would likely use a Yamaha SPX-90 or 900 to get the effect. I do it today with a 25 yr old Alesis Quadraverb in my stage rig.
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Post by donr on Mar 1, 2014 12:03:30 GMT -6
The Yamaha SPX 90 had this effect too. Ha, jinx Bob. I didn't hit refresh before my post!
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