Computer Music

U-HE TWANGSTRÖM

There aren’t many spring reverb plugins out there to choose from, so can the latest from these German geniuses shake up the scene?

- Web u-he.com

We don’t know whether or not it was always u-he’s intention to eventually start breaking the vintage analogue-style effects modules out of their softsynths and expand them into plugins in their own right, but we’re certainly glad they’re running with the idea. First, we had the fabulous Colour Copy bucket brigade delay (9/10, 262), an expansion on Repro’s Lyrebird; and now it’s joined by a beefed-up take on Bazille’s Spring Reverb.

Described by the developers as “a flexible spring reverb box-of-tricks”, Twangström (VST/ AU/AAX) builds on the Bazille original by adding two further springs (for a total of three), a filter and a modulation system that takes it far beyond the bounds of ‘realistic’ spring reverb. The tanks are modelled on those found in specific guitar amps, which suggests that, in terms of classic dub-style spring sounds at least, it’s intended first and foremost for use on guitars, keyboards, vocals and the like.

Tank commander

The central panel in the Twangström interface offers a menu of three spring configurat­ions: ‘2 Springs – Type 4’, ‘3 Springs – Type 8’ and ‘2 Springs – Type 9’. Type 4 is based on “a large dual-spring tank like those in early Fender guitar amps” and features jointed (ie, split in the middle by small metal interconne­cts – see screenshot above) springs that yield a lively sound with a bold low end. Type 8 models a smaller, Marshallst­yle tank with three springs, and is the least weighty of the three but more dense than Type 4. And Type 9 is a bigger version of Type 8, with its three jointed springs resulting in a more tamed presentati­on.

The Decay, Tension and Density knobs work together to shape the reverb’s tail and character. Decay controls the damping of the springs, rolling off high frequencie­s first. Tension alters the time it takes for vibrations to travel from one end of each spring to the other, and is described in millisecon­ds and note pitches in the central graphic. The springs are slightly uneven in length, so they always differ, ranging from 92 to 18ms at the two extreme ends of the Tension knob’s range.

Density governs the dispersion of echoes and thus the reverb’s smoothness: turning it up reduces the audible oscillatio­ns of the springs for a less delay-like sound. The adjacent Coupling and Bright switches feed the springs into each other so they interact rather than vibrate independen­tly, and double the internal sample rate for a top-end boost.

When a real spring reverb is shaken, the rattling of the springs generates a cacophony of its own, and Twangström emulates this with the Shake parameter, operated by vigorously dragging the ring on the springs graphic up and down. Why? Well, u-he suggest applying subtle modulation to Shake to agitate the reverb, which can indeed work well when done with care.

Rattle and roll

Twangström provides a good amount of preand post-processing for the spring tank. The input signal is overdriven and saturated with the Input Gain and Drive controls, while the Tone knob adjusts a tilt EQ. At output, Width control sweeps from mono to super wide using mid-side processing, with individual spring positions fixed in pan positions per their configurat­ion.

The 12dB/octave resonant filter can be placed before or after the tank, and morphs continuous­ly from low-pass to high-pass via a notch or band-pass response. The Stereo knob applies left/right offset for creative asymmetry.

Up to three parameters (plus the Amp, which has its own modulation routing) can be modulated by the onboard envelope and LFO via a small modulation matrix. The Envelope is triggered by the input, output or an external sidechain, and can work as a regular envelope follower or a threshold-based system, or be set to cycle through the attack and decay like an LFO. The actual LFO features a broad selection of waveforms and scalable rates, synced and unsynced, from 0.1s to eight bars.

Although three/four assignment slots doesn’t seem like many, we didn’t find ourselves wishing for more. What we did want, though, was visual representa­tion of our modulation­s – something u-he never implement, for some reason.

Spring has sprung

Perhaps due to its guitar amp origins, Twangström is notably low-mid focussed – even for a spring reverb – and the Bright and Tone controls only go so far towards countering that. While we absolutely approve of the particular timbral vibe that u-he have gone for, it does arguably make it a bit less exciting on drums than other spring reverbs. On guitars, keys and synths, however, that silky smooth darkness – and the amazingly realistic spring behaviour – proves wholly effective, lending sounds a rich, ‘analogue’ flavour that we’ve not come across in software before, and that dub producers will fall in love with. But Twangström is about more than just convention­al reverb treatments: it’s the modulation and the versatilit­y of the spring modelling that really define it, enabling the creation of otherworld­ly ambiences, strange wobbles and unique textures through frequency-, amplitude- and stereo-based movement. Occupying its own niche in the not overly busy spring reverb market, Twangström is a very special thing.

“Twangström builds on the Bazille original by adding two further springs, a filter and a modulation system”

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u-he’s excellent preset browser is built in, featuring tagging, favourites, search history and more

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