Computer Music

MÄAG AUDIO MAGNUM-K

The boutique American manufactur­ers have turned their flagship rackmount channel strip into a software plugin for a fraction of the price

- Web plugin-alliance.com

“The compressor has a nifty trick up its sleeve in the shape of the Comp Range knob”

Developed by brainworx, Magnum-K is a stereo plugin emulation of Mäag Audio’s dynamic-EQ-incorporat­ing single-channel strip (see Magnum Opus for the back story). Both the hardware and software versions are remarkable for a couple of reasons. First, Magnum-K’s architectu­re brings together two very different compressor­s, an unusual two-band EQ and a limiter. Second, Mäag made their name in EQ, and this is their first ever compressor.

Apart from the enormous difference in price and the ability to run as many of them as your Mac or PC can handle, other advantages presented by the plugin (VST/AU/AAX) over a pair of the real things include mid-side operation, stereo manipulati­on, dry/wet mixing and metering. So, even if the software Magnum-K isn’t 100% identical to its hardware counterpar­t (and we must confess, we don’t have the latter to hand for direct comparison), any discrepanc­ies should hopefully be more than made up for by its affordabil­ity and convenienc­e. And bearing in mind that it’s owned by Mäag themselves, we would expect those discrepanc­ies to be minor at worst anyway. This isn’t a company known for compromisi­ng with their emulations, as proven by the superb EQ2 and EQ4.

K class

The plugin certainly looks the part, represente­d graphicall­y as either one or two photoreali­stic Magnum-Ks, depending on whether the mono or stereo version is loaded, with all the softwareex­clusive enhancemen­ts in the separate ‘brainworx’ unit at the bottom. With the stereo version, the two main units handle the Left and Right channels, or Mid and Side if the M/S button is engaged, and can be linked for mirrored control (ie, adjusting a parameter on one changes it equally on the other) if required.

At the start of the chain, the Input Attenuatio­n and Input Gain knobs offer up to -12dB and +12dB of starting level adjustment. After that, the signal hits the main compressor, a supremely transparen­t ‘optical’ circuit that Mäag have dubbed Magnum Comp. Just as their quasi-magical Air Band makes for a powerful extension of convention­al high-shelving EQ, we’re pleased to report that the company’s first ever compressor also has a nifty trick up its sleeve in the shape of the Comp Range knob. This limits the amount of gain reduction applied to 4, 8, 12 or 16dB, making it a set-and-forget solution for preventing over-compressio­n, regardless of ratio. The available Ratios range from 1.3:1 to 13:1, while the Attack and Release times go from 5-200ms and 100ms-1.2s

respective­ly, and a sidechain filter takes the lows out of the detection circuit at 40, 80, 120 or 220Hz, or can be set to receive an external keying signal. The Threshold knob is ‘inverted’, applying more compressio­n the further clockwise it’s twisted.

Interestin­gly, the compressor is also switchable between feedback and feed-forward routing, the second option taking its sidechain signal before the gain reduction stage and thus being much more aggressive than the first.

Next in the signal path, K Comp comprises nothing more than an In/Out switch and another Threshold knob for setting the input level at which further compressio­n is applied around the 3kHz frequency range. Crank it up and hear those abrasive high-mids melt away.

Breathe in the air

The EQ2 section houses two boost-only EQ bands and runs in parallel to the serial compressor­s, so it can be applied on its own or employed as a ‘sculpted’ make-up gain for the compressed signal. The Low Mid Frequency (LMF) peaking band works in either of two discrete bell-width modes: Tight or Wide. Each mode has its own set of five fixed frequency detents – between them covering 40Hz-1.4kHz, plus a 10Hz Sub band – and up to 15dB of gain is on tap in Wide mode, while Tight mode’s more focused peak maxes out at +12dB.

The Air Band is as awesome here as it is in Mäag’s EQ modules/plugins, giving up to 20dB of shelving boost cornered broadly at 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 or 40kHz. Adding sheen and presence to anything sent its way, the effect of the Air Band is felt way below the corner frequency thanks to the shape of the slope. It’s just fabulous, and you’ll want to use it on absolutely everything.

At the very end of the signal path, up to 15dB of make-up gain is dialled in, and a soft limiter provides a final stage of compressio­n. And down in the brainworx unit, the TMT (Tolerance Modelling Technology) section lets you select one of 20 slight variations in frequency response, time constants and other under-thehood details for each channel, enabling analogue-style differenti­ation between multiple instances of the plugin in the same project. Then there’s a monoising filter for centralisi­ng everything below a selected frequency from 20Hz-22kHz, stereo widening from 0-400%, a pre- or post-compressio­n low-pass filter (40220Hz), the dry/wet Mix control, and a bank of meters: Input, Output, Gain Reduction, stereo Balance and Correlatio­n.

Special K

Right, let’s get the annoyances out of the way first: ratios, thresholds and gains are all displayed as values from 1-10, rather than x:1 or dB; the GUI is very small on a high-res display and can’t be scaled up; and Magnum Comp and EQ2 (as a whole, not its individual bands) could both do with bypass buttons.

That said, the hardware Magnum-K is one of the tastiest pieces of studio gear of the last few years, and being able to call it up ‘in the box’ is endlessly exhilarati­ng. Inserted on the master bus, it’s a bona fide miracle worker, effortless­ly aerating, widening and coalescing mixes, and having a generally embiggenin­g effect. But why wait til the mastering stage? The lift in gloss and power that it gives to vocals, guitars and other instrument­ation is heavenly, too. Musical and magnificen­t, Magnum-K is a plugin that every serious engineer needs to check out.

“The Air Band is as awesome here as it is in Mäag’s EQ modules and plugins”

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 ??  ?? INPUT GAIN Boost the signal into the compressor by up to 12dB M/S Magnum-K works in regular stereo or mid-side mode COMP RANGE Set a maximum amount of gain reduction TMT Models variations in tolerance between 20 ‘channels’ RATIO Squish those peaks at ratios from 1.3:1 to 13:1 BX SECTION A monoising filter, stereo widening and more K COMP A dynamic EQ band at 3kHz for harshness reduction METERING Keep an eye on all your levels, as well as stereo correlatio­n LMF EQ BAND A boost-only peaking band with Wide/Tight modes SOFT LIMITER Apply final limiting with a choice of four thresholds AIR BAND A silky shelving band cornering at up to 40kHz
INPUT GAIN Boost the signal into the compressor by up to 12dB M/S Magnum-K works in regular stereo or mid-side mode COMP RANGE Set a maximum amount of gain reduction TMT Models variations in tolerance between 20 ‘channels’ RATIO Squish those peaks at ratios from 1.3:1 to 13:1 BX SECTION A monoising filter, stereo widening and more K COMP A dynamic EQ band at 3kHz for harshness reduction METERING Keep an eye on all your levels, as well as stereo correlatio­n LMF EQ BAND A boost-only peaking band with Wide/Tight modes SOFT LIMITER Apply final limiting with a choice of four thresholds AIR BAND A silky shelving band cornering at up to 40kHz
 ??  ?? The mono version of the plugin loses all of the stereo-related gubbins from the brainworx section
The mono version of the plugin loses all of the stereo-related gubbins from the brainworx section

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