Computer Music

SOFTUBE TUBETECH COLLECTION

The originals are long gone, and the hardware clones will break your bank – but that Pultec and Teletronix magic can still be yours in software…

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Almost a decade after the launch of their trio of native Tube-Tech valve EQ and compressor emulations, Softube have collective­ly upgraded and tweaked them to take advantage of today’s much more powerful Macs and PCs, and their higher-spec displays, and thrown in a couple of completely new features to sweeten the upgrade deal.

As was the case with its predecesso­r, TubeTech Complete Collection Mk II centres on plugin (VST/AU/AAX) virtualisa­tions of TubeTech’s PE 1C (which originally scored 8/10 in 156) and ME 1B (8/10, 167) EQs, and the CL 1B compressor (9/10, 150).

The first and most obvious of the bigger changes, however, is that the EQs now come combined in a single plugin rather than being provided as two separate ones. As before, you can buy the MK II plugins individual­ly, bundled with their older ‘legacy’ versions as the TubeTech EQ Collection ($199) and Compressor Collection ($299); but grabbing the full TubeTech Complete Collection Mk II not only lowers the price of both together but also nets you the Tube-Tech Classic Channel, which unifies the three Mk II processors in a single channel stripstyle plugin.

The second obvious change for Mk II is in the graphics department. The whole lot has been given the Retina/Hi-DPI treatment, and made much bigger for easier mousing, while the dual EQ simply stacks the two previous plugins on top of each other. The pointless brown borders and overly realistic ‘lighting’ on the stepped knobs have been ditched, too, and that, thankfully, gives the GUIs a cleaner, more contempora­ry look.

Existing owners of the Complete Collection can upgrade for $99, incidental­ly, and for those unfamiliar with the original Tube-Tech hardware, a quick history lesson can be found in On the Tube-Tech.

PE 1C and ME 1B EQ

Just like the real Tube-Tech boxes (and the Pultec originals before them) the idea behind the PE 1C and ME 1B ‘passive’ EQs has generally always been to use them in series, with PE 1C handling high and low shelving and mid-range boost, and ME 1B following up with high and low boost, and its sweepable mid-range ‘Dip’ bell. It’s perfectly reasonable, then, that Softube have stuck them together in a single plugin, with each section including its own power button, facilitati­ng individual usage. Strangely, though, the two EQs can’t be reordered, so the only way to run ME 1B before PE 1C (unconventi­onal, we know) is to load two plugins and bypass one of the EQs in each. Not a great chore, but a routing switch would be preferable nonetheles­s.

Softube’s PE 1C sounded the business already, and with its improved engine, Mk II feels perhaps a touch silkier, but it’s a very subtle difference, if any. Dialling in the ‘low-end trick’

(boosting and attenuatin­g the Low Frequency band simultaneo­usly) is a good test of any EQP1A or derivative thereof, and PE 1C Mk II handles with aplomb, bringing the best out in kick drums and basses. Again, though, the difference between it and Mk I is anything but profound – upgraders be aware.

It’s the same story with ME 1B, which models the Low and High Peak filters, and all-important overlappin­g 0.2-7kHz bell-shaped cut filter of the real thing beautifull­y.

Softube claim that nothing major has been changed with the EQs apart from their repackagin­g as a single plugin, which may have a minor effect on the sound. Ultimately, then, these are the same wonderfull­y musical, warm and natural sounding Tube-Tech EQs we’ve known and loved since 2010.

CL 1B and Classic Channel

While the two EQs are basically unchanged, the LA-2A-inspired CL 1B opto compressor has been rebuilt from scratch, and now includes a sidechain low-cut filter (80 or 220Hz), and a dry/ wet mix control for parallel processing. The remaining parameters are unchanged, including the option of Fixed or Manual Attack and Release settings (the former no longer paralysing the two knobs, confusingl­y), or a combinatio­n of both, which simplifies timing adjustment; compressio­n Ratios up to 10:1; and an external sidechain input.

With its fast attack and smooth release, and rich, colourful sound, this has long been one of the best software compressor­s that money can buy for vocals, basses, guitars and the (largely non-percussive) like, but Mk II is noticeably smoother, punchier and more responsive, and less prone to distortion with fast attack times. It’s fabulous.

Finally, Classic Channel piles all three processors up in a single plugin, giving you the further option to place the EQs pre or post compressio­n, a choice of left/right or mid/side processing, and the ability to unlink L/M and R/S for independen­t parameter adjustment of each. Handy, indeed.

Soft sell

While CL 1B is awkwardly expensive on its own, we’d describe Tube-Tech Complete Collection Mk II as reasonable value, since the quality of all four plugins is truly exceptiona­l. However, we do think the upgrades from the previous versions should be free, as while the new CL 1B modelling and mix control, and stereo configurat­ion options are great, they’re not gamechangi­ng.

Economics aside (and disregardi­ng Softube’s intrusive, overblown new preset browser), this is a fantastic set of vintage-style, ‘tube’-powered mixing effects, easy to work with and fair dripping with musicality and analogue soul.

“Mk II is smoother, punchier and more responsive, and less prone to distortion with fast attack times”

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 ??  ?? CL 1B is the only one of Tube-Tech Complete Collection MK II’s plugins to have been fully remodelled
CL 1B is the only one of Tube-Tech Complete Collection MK II’s plugins to have been fully remodelled

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