Computer Music

LETHAL AUDIO LETHAL

With more than 1100 sampled sounds built in, this sound module wants to be your first choice for dance and electronic music production

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Despite its ‘instant music’ connotatio­ns, the sample-based sound module, aka ROM pler, never seems to fall out of favour. From the classic Roland JV series to IK Multimedia’s Sample Tank, these bread-and-butter boxes and plugins have been providing music producers with ready-made instrument­ation of all kinds for decades, the primary appeal lying in their expansive soundbanks, ease-of-use and quick results.

Lethal, the debut release from Australian developers Lethal Audio, is a plugin ROM pler (VST/AU/AAX) built with dance music in mind, clearly taking aim at re FX’s hugely successful Nexus2, which fits the same descriptio­n.

Deadly weapon

Lethal installs in two parts: the plugin and the soundbank, the latter weighing in at 5GB and covered in-depth on the next page (See Killer Sounds). The Library tab of the central panel is where the 1100+ factory presets (and any edited ones saved into your User Library) are accessed – simply select a Category and doubleclic­k one of the presets therein to load it.

The left and right panels house Lethal’s various sound-shaping controls, enabling fairly radical transforma­tion of the core samples. The Amp, Filter and Pitch sections in the left-hand panel each have their own dedicated ADSR envelope and LFO. The envelopes feature adjustable curves for the Attack, Decay and Release stages, while the LFOs can have their depths modulated by mod wheel input or Channel Pressure. That’s where Lethal’s modulation setup starts and finishes.

The filter itself is surprising­ly well equipped, with an extensive selection of modes that goes beyond the usual LP/HP/BP standards with Notch, Low and High Shelf, Peak and All Pass options, and a choice of 6, 12 or 24dB/octave roll-off slopes for all of them. The filter Drive responds nicely, too, and is bipolar, progressiv­ely degrading the signal when turned anticlockw­ise from centre.

With the three synthesis essentials – volume, pitch and filtering – covered on the left, the righthand panel facilitate­s further processing, including Unison detune (up to eight voices), vibrato, stereo widening, harmonic

“The filter itself is surprising­ly well equipped, with an extensive selection of modes”

“Lethal without doubt achieves its goal of providing an enormous variety of high-quality danceorien­tated sounds”

enhancemen­t (Shine), overdrive, glide, and reverse playback of the source samples. A noise generator can also be dialled in (White, Pink or Blue), while the Chord function automatica­lly builds chords on top of the triggering MIDI notes.

Arping on

Located in the second tab of the central panel, Lethal’s Arpeggiato­r offers Up, Down, Up/Down, Random and Poly modes, Shuffle control and a Strum knob, for spreading the held notes in Poly mode, guitar chord-style. It also doubles as a step sequencer, complete with its own pattern presets.

The next tab along opens the equally straightfo­rward stereo TranceGate, again with its own presets menu, for independen­t left/right rhythmic gating of pads and other sustained tones.

Last but not least, the FX tab loads up to six modules at a time, each chosen from a rather predictabl­e roster of seven: Reverb, Delay, Chorus, Phaser, Distortion, Equalizer and Bitcrusher. None of them are going to set the world on fire (particular­ly the reverb), but they’re good enough to get the job done when it comes to mangling or tarting up Lethal’s samples prior to mixdown. Handily, the effects can be dragged around to reorder them, and all have their own presets, which really helps to keep things moving when you’re ‘in the flow’.

Murder on the dancefloor

Lethal sounds great, is easy to work with, and puts a very light tax on the host CPU. The fact that its Arpeggiato­r and TranceGate effects are relatively basic should be considered a plus, since workflow is everything with a sound module like this – you want to be able to fly around it without getting snagged up in any one element of its architectu­re.

It is, however, a bit rough around the edges, with a few oddities to the GUI, such as the pointless buttons for unidirecti­onal stepping through certain menus (eg, LFO Wave and Filter Type), which are more fiddly than just using the menus themselves.

Then there’s the haphazard arrangemen­t of the note value menus in the Arpeggiato­r (Rate) and TranceGate (Rate and Fade In), which present straight, triplet and dotted options hierarchic­ally, invariably with straight values in the second layer, and the other two varying in terms of which comes first or last. Strange and annoyingly inconsiste­nt. Right-clicking to load effects never feels right, either (we’d prefer a left-click menu within each panel), and the poor preset naming and lack of actual drum kits (see Killer sounds) also have to be cited as negatives. Oh, and the manual is evidently a long way from finished.

Still, most of those criticisms are very minor, and all could potentiall­y be addressed in future updates. Putting those aside, Lethal without doubt achieves its goal of providing an enormous variety of high-quality dance-orientated sounds, with enough editing and processing to ensure genuine longevity.

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 ??  ?? There are no surprises to be found in Lethal’s FX section, but its seven modules are decent enough
There are no surprises to be found in Lethal’s FX section, but its seven modules are decent enough

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