Computer Music

UNFILTERED AUDIO FAULT

What do you get when you combine pitchshift­ing, frequency shifting, delay and filtering with a freeform modulation system in one plugin?

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Billed as a “stereo spectral shifter” and “a new kind of effect”, Fault (VST/AU/AAX) is a plugin effect with three discrete processors at its heart, all of them manipulate­d independen­tly for the left and right channels, or linked.

The first section is the Pitch Shifter, which simply pitches left, right or both channels up and/or down by up to an octave, in 0.1 semitone steps, or semitone steps if the Quantize button is activated.

Next, the Frequency Shifter consists of a main knob for setting the Base shift amount up to +/-500Hz and a pair of associated controls for modifying it: Multiply scales the Base frequency by 0.0x to 10x in 0.1x steps, while Spread multiplies the left channel by the right channel from -1.0x to 1.0x, again in 0.1x steps. Thus, the full range of the frequency shifter becomes +/-5kHz, and the right channel can be offset from the left channel pretty much freely. The Base, Left and Right frequencie­s are shown in the middle of the main knob.

Although all the Frequency Shifter’s controls are available as targets for Fault’s modulation sources, the section also incorporat­es its own frequency modulation oscillator, for adding that characteri­stic metallic FM ‘ring’ to the sound. The FM Frequency ranges from 0x to 10x (in 0.1x steps), as does the FM Depth knob. There’s also a button for switching between linear and exponentia­l FM algorithms.

The third processing stage is the Delay section, with separate (but linkable) delay lines for the left and right channels, and delay times of 5-2000ms in unsynced mode and 1 bar to 1/64T synced.

It’s your Fault

With its combinatio­n of channel-independen­t pitchshift­ing, frequency shifting and delay, Fault is already pretty unusual, but the Feedback matrix really brings it all together, with separate feedback paths for the pitch-/frequency-shifted signal and the delayed signal, each with independen­t left and right level controls, and adjustable L/R cross-feedback. Cranking up the Shifter feedback introduces buzz, burble and aggression, while Delay feedback, of course, extends and smears the delays in time. Low- and high-pass filters in the feedback path provide tonal darkening and brightenin­g, and the Stabilize switch keeps the feedback from getting out of control – disable it and Fault can actually ‘self-oscillate’ without input.

Finally, the Spectrum and Output sections house controls for lowering the sample rate throughout the plugin (with subsequent altering of frequency shift and unsynced delay times), soft clipping, anti-aliasing (for clearer downward frequency shifting through suppressio­n of low harmonic ‘bounce’), mid/side processing and stereo width adjustment. There’s also a Ring Mode, for turning the shifters into ring modulators, opening up further textural possibilit­ies.

The range of effects that Fault can pull off is enormous. It specialise­s in overtly creative processing, from extreme, highly animated, metalised mangling of frequency, time and spread, but it’s also very useful as a functional/ corrective mixing tool, bringing instrument­s to the fore or reposition­ing them in stereo space via gentle modulation and feedback filtering.

Particular­ly effective on drums, synths, vocals and other frequency-rich signals, Fault is, ironically, almost faultless, the high asking price being the only significan­t issue. Web www.pluginalli­ance.com

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