Computer Music

ACCUSONUS BEATFORMER

Bearing more than a passing resemblanc­e to Live 10’s Drum Buss, this four-knob multieffec­ts plugin is a powerful loop processing tool

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Obviously inspired by Ableton’s excellent Drum Buss plugin (introduced with Live 10), Beatformer (VST/AU/AAX) is a ‘one-stop shop’ for applying multiband transient and dynamics shaping, and bass and high-frequency harmonic generation to full drum tracks. A dozen processors are at work in the background, comprising transient shapers, saturators, a compressor and a bass booster, but everything is boiled down to just four knobs at the front, keeping things eminently simple. The two pertinent questions, then, are: does the lack of detailed control over the underlying modules matter, and is Beatformer as sonically effective as Drum Buss?

Punch drunk

Immediatel­y after the Input Gain circuit (+/-24dB), the signal is divided behind the scenes into its low, mid and high components, each of which is sent to its own processing chain, as illustrate­d in the manual. Only the mid/high crossover is adjustable, via the High Split knob, which positions it anywhere from 4-12kHz. This ultimately sets the frequency divide between Beatformer‘s Punch/Squash and Air processes.

Punch and Squash are closely related, the first altering the balance of the transient and sustain elements of the signal, the second compressin­g or expanding the resulting output. Both are bidirectio­nal, so you can bring out the transients to add, well, punch or push them back to soften a beat; then add ‘tail’ and smear to the groove by raising Squash, or ‘dry out’ the drums by lowering it. Punch and Squash only operate on the frequencie­s below the High Split setting.

Above High Split, the Air knob governs the activity of a soft saturator and another transient shaper, adding harmonics for an exciter-style effect when turned clockwise, and working rather like a high-pass filter or high-shelf EQ anticlockw­ise. The High Split separation between Air and the Punch/Squash combo is creatively empowering, enabling snares and hats, for example, to be handled independen­tly.

The Boom control adds sub-bass harmonics to the low frequency range, enhancing kick drums, toms and other bottom-heavy percussion. Like Drum Buss, selecting a note name from the menu below the knob (D1-E2) mixes in a synthesise­d tone at that pitch, for tuning your kick, tom, etc. Unlike with Drum Buss, however, this is optional – you can just take the Harmonics as they are if you prefer.

Finally, an optional output limiter keeps everything under control at the very end of the signal path.

’Former and function

Beatformer sounds truly sublime, with huge range and flexibilit­y to its transient and sustain shaping, smooth bass and top-end enhancemen­t, and impressive transparen­cy even when pushed hard. To answer our two introducto­ry questions, at no point yet have we found ourselves wishing we could reach further into Beatformer’s algorithms than its four controls allow; and yes, it’s every bit as useful as Drum Buss, but with more of a focus on transient design and low/high harmonics than overt distortion and compressio­n. Plus, of course, you can use Beatformer in any DAW, not just Live. It’s a superb, effortless plugin, capable of imbuing even the dullest of beats with life and energy, or transformi­ng them entirely.

Web www.accusonus.com

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