Computer Music

SOFTUBE OTO BISCUIT EFFECTS

Still crunchy after half a decade, this modern classic has now been made available for UAD-2 and Apollo-touting producers

- Web www.uaudio.com

It’s not often that a new plugin gets released for Universal Audio’s DSP-powered UAD-2 and Apollo platforms aimed primarily at electronic producers rather than engineers working in rock and pop, so the release of Softube’s emulation of the sought-after OTO Machines Biscuit is big news. Like the real thing (of which only a few hundred were made between 2010 and 2013), the comparativ­ely primitive outward appearance of this virtual box of lo-fi tricks belies the depth, quality and character of the sounds it makes, but nonetheles­s, all but the greenest of music technologi­sts will be able to master its intuitive front panel in minutes.

Creamy crunch

OTO Biscuit 8-Bit Effects (VST/AU/AAX/RTAS) is a digital distortion unit incorporat­ing an analogue-style filter and four “Brain” effects. The top half of the interface handles bit-manipulati­on, sample rate reduction and filtering, while the bottom half (which doesn’t exist in the hardware, its controls instead modally laid out on the buttons and knobs above) houses the effects: Wave Shaping, Delay, Pitch Shifting and Step Filter.

The first stage of the signal flow is the Drive circuit, which emulates a diode clipper and gets decidedly nasty when pushed hard. This harsh clipping is part of the point rather than a phenomenon to be avoided, and the Bypass button – which lights up green when inactive, counterint­uitively – flashes red when it happens, not that you’ll need it pointing out! Next to the Drive knob, the Naked and Dressed controls set the dry and wet output levels respective­ly.

The digital distortion at the heart of Biscuit is applied using the bank of eight “Biscuiting switches” and the Clock knob. Each switch represents one of the eight bits in the signal, with the Least Significan­t Bit (LSB) at the left hand end and the Most Significan­t Bit (MSB) at the right. Clicking a switch toggles it through three states – on (white), inverted (red) and muted (unlit) – and the severity of the resultant distortion increases the further to the right the bits are inverted or muted, from subtle noise at the LSB end to total decimation when MSB is punched out.

The Clock knob, meanwhile, progressiv­ely sweeps the internal sample rate down from 30kHz to 250Hz for a smoother flavour of disintegra­tion – it’s a prime candidate for live performanc­e and automation.

With Biscuit’s distortion being potentiall­y so extreme, the inclusion of a 12dB ‘analogue’ resonant multimode filter at the end of the chain is an architectu­ral masterstro­ke, enabling instant curtailmen­t of its outrageous sonic excesses. Inspired by the filter on the Korg MS-20, it features low-pass, high-pass and band-pass modes, and is as silky, fluid and responsive as they come. Shift-dragging the Clock knob moves the filter Frequency knob in

tandem with it – again, great for DJs and live performers.

Brain and beauty

The bottom section, activated by the Brain button, plays host to Biscuit’s four effects modules, only one of which can be used at a time. The effect itself is chosen using the four buttons at the bottom, and the four knobs to the right are contextual.

The Wave Shaper module offers eight shapers, the first five comprising positive and negative rectifiers, foldback distortion, ‘fifth-down’ distortion and bit swapping, while shapers 6 to 8 are in fact simple pitch-tracking synthesise­rs, intended mainly for thickening up bass sounds. Shadowing the input with Sawtooth, Lo Sawtooth (an octave down) or Lo Square waves, they also apply envelope filter modulation, merging the input signal and synth nicely. The first five shapers are wicked, further extending Biscuit’s distortion credential­s, but the three synth shapers we could take or leave.

Unlike its hardware mono equivalent, Biscuit’s Delay module is in stereo, with up to five seconds of host-synced or free-running delay time, a feedback circuit, and note values from dotted 16th to 1/4.

The Pitch Shifter transposes the sound by eight musically meaningful preset points within +1 to -2 octaves, using a very short delay buffer that naturally imparts chorusing between the dry and wet signals. The jewel in the Biscuit effects crown, however, is the Step Filter, which is discussed in Stepping out.

Take the Biscuit

As was the case for so… well, the few owners of the original hardware, we’ve become hopelessly addicted to Biscuit. It’s capable of far more than just the searing bitcrushin­g and waveshapin­g for which it’s best known – it also serves as a versatile warming and enhancing processor with a unique sound and style. Experiment­ing with Biscuiting switch combinatio­ns doesn’t actually open up as broad a range of distortion colours as you’d expect, with the right-hand end being so dominant over the left; but that doesn’t matter – you’ll often find the edge you’re looking for by just inverting or muting one or two of them anyway, before losing yourself in the Clock, Filter and Brain controls, which make for a compelling set of sound design and performanc­e tools.

Our only bugbear is that, in adherence to the original hardware, you can only use one Brain effect at a time, although there’s presumably no technical reason why all four couldn’t be made active together. We can understand Softube and UA’s reluctance to break the mould, though, and ultimately, OTO Biscuit 8-Bit Effects is a fine addition to the UAD larder, and one that every suitably equipped electronic musician and DJ needs to get their teeth into.

“The Clock, Filter and Brain controls make for a compelling set of sound design and performanc­e tools”

 ??  ?? DRIVE Overdrive the diode clipper for harsh saturation BYPASS Lights up green when disengaged, and red to indicate clipping BISCUITING SWITCHES Each one inverts or mutes its correspond­ing bit EFFECTS DISPLAY Contents varies depending on the active...
DRIVE Overdrive the diode clipper for harsh saturation BYPASS Lights up green when disengaged, and red to indicate clipping BISCUITING SWITCHES Each one inverts or mutes its correspond­ing bit EFFECTS DISPLAY Contents varies depending on the active...
 ??  ?? The Wave Shaper’s three synthesis options are handy for bolstering basslines
The Wave Shaper’s three synthesis options are handy for bolstering basslines

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia