Computer Music

WAVES FACTORY SPECTRE

A harmonic enhancemen­t plugin that you operate like a parametric EQ? Colour us interested…

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The second plugin effect from Jesús Ginard (following the Trackspace­r sidechain EQ), Spectre combines an enhancer with a parametric EQ to facilitate the targeted applicatio­n of harmonic distortion to specific frequency ranges. It’s intended to be deployed like an EQ – albeit a parallel one – but yielding rather more particular, transforma­tive results.

Chief in Spectre

With its understate­d horizontal pink-to-blue colour shift, Spectre is quite a looker, but we’ve absolutely no idea what the idea is behind the optional big background (a very thick border, essentiall­y) around the whole thing, which looks really weird. We can’t imagine anyone not turning off immediatel­y.

To put the plugin (VST/AU/AAX) to work, you select one of eight distortion algorithms (see Ghosts in the machine), then manipulate the five-band EQ in the usual way, dragging nodes around in the display to set frequencie­s and gains, and scrolling the mouse wheel to broaden and narrow the Q factor. Comprising high and low shelves, and three peaking filters, the EQ actually applies the chosen flavour of saturation to each band at the specified gain, as well as adjusting their volume levels. Specifical­ly, the difference between the dry and EQed signals (the coloured area under the frequency response curve) is distorted, generating new harmonics that aren’t actually present in the source – ie, enhancemen­t – rather than just making what’s already there louder. Since harmonic distortion can be added to a signal but not removed from it, it’s a boost-only design, with up to +12dB of gain on tap for each band.

The Mode menu offers an increasing­ly intense choice of Subtle, Medium or Aggressive saturation, and up to +/-12dB of input drive can be dialled in beyond that to push the algorithm further or pull it back. The summed bands are blended with the dry signal at the output using the dry/wet Mix control, which is set to the 50/50 centre point by default.

The Processing menu houses a choice of channel configurat­ions: Stereo, Left, Right, Mid and Side. Yes, that means you have to use two instances of the plugin for mid-side processing – clearly an integrated dual-channel architectu­re would be preferable, but it’s not a deal-breaker by any means. Oversampli­ng is also adjustable through the Quality menu, with 0x (Normal), 8x (Medium) and 16x (Best) options onboard, and a low enough CPU hit introduced by the last to make it a viable default.

Top Spectre

Spectre is a novel, well conceived and thoroughly usable processor that offers something genuinely different in its parallel frequency-targeted enhancemen­t paradigm. It can certainly do full-on distortion of the wantonly creative kind, but its real engineerin­g worth lies in its ability to add high-end detail (sparkle and bite), low-mid emphasis (bass presence and ‘poke’) and general sheen to all kinds of instrument­ation and mixed signals, up to and including the mastering stage. It’s a shame there’s no I/O spectrogra­m or metering of any kind, and the mid-or-side thing is a minor blip, but neither of those prevent Spectre from earning our enthusiast­ic recommenda­tion as a unique, interestin­g and endlessly colourful harmonic enhancemen­t effect.

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