Future Music

Native Instrument­s Effects Series Mod Pack

NI unleash a trio of creative modulation effects. Si Truss gets wavey…

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NI’s latest plugin release, Mod Pack, contains a trio of classic modulation effects with easy-to-use interfaces that belie their depth and originalit­y. These three effects – Phasis, Choral and Flair – each replicate tried and tested hardware-style effects, but with a few unique tricks up their sleeves.

Phasis initially appeared towards the end of last year as a free download for existing NI gear owners (and those who grabbed it at the time can claim a £15 discount on the full Mod Pack). As you’d expect with a software phaser, Phasis has controls for adjusting the amount of notches applied to the frequency spectrum, along with the feedback (or resonance) of these. There’s a sync-able LFO with rate control to act as a modulation source, and an amount control for adjusting the depth of modulation. Here we also get separate controls for adjusting the frequency Centre and the Spread of the notches, and a slider that adjusts how the modulation is distribute­d between these. An Ultra mode takes things further still, by extending the Rate and Centre ranges into the audible frequency range, to create effects more akin to Phase Modulation synthesis.

Choral, meanwhile, is a chorus effect with four modes: Synth, providing Juno-style effects; Ensemble, replicatin­g classic string synth tones; Dimension, emulating the BBD-style chorus of units like Roland’s Dimension D; and Universal, a more general, plugin-style chorus. Width, modulation Rate, Delay and Feedback controls allow each mode to be tweaked to taste.

Flair is the most interestin­g of the trio. Here we get a flanger effect powered by four separate comb filters, referred to here as Voices. These voices can be added at a variety of different preset harmonic intervals, effectivel­y allowing the plugin to act as a chord generator. There are three different modes dictating how these voices interact: standard, where these stacked voices behave like a regular flanger; Thru Zero, which behaves more like a pair of classic tape machines; and Scan where Flair cycles through the voices creating an arpeggiato­r-like effect.

While none of the Mod Pack effects feel like they’re short on controls, each does keep things fairly simple, generally limited to no more than eight or nine parameters crammed on to the small (but resizable) UI. This is clearly done to optimise each for use with NI’s Maschine or Komplete Kontrol hardware, but it also results in making all three effects approachab­le for quick tweaking. A healthy crop of presets for each helps too.

NI describe the Mod Pack effects as being an upgrade to your DAWs stock modulation effects, and that sums them up pretty well. Each provides quick, classic effects but with a few unique touches that set them apart from their peers. Priced at £60 for the three, these are a must-buy for Maschine/Komplete Kontrol users, but come highly recommende­d for anyone after a quick source of creative effects.

Easy-to-use interfaces belie their depth and originalit­y

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