Computer Music

ACUSTICA AUDIO AZURE

This ambitious convolutio­n-based mastering EQ plugin samples one of the poshest hardware units around

- www.acustica-audio.com

A convolutio­n-based plugin emulation (VST/ AU/AAX) of the ridiculous­ly expensive Knif Soma valve passive mastering EQ (specifical­ly, the very one owned by renowned mastering engineer Zino Mikorey), Azure is part of Acustica’s Acqua series, built on their new Core 11 technology – see Core, blimey!. Although the transforme­rs and “signal-path characteri­stics” of the original hardware have been faithfully captured, apparently, the EQ band summing topology has been changed from parallel to serial. Whether this is totally intentiona­l or down to a technical limitation, we’re not sure.

Installing through Acustica’s simple-buteffecti­ve new account-tied Aquarius applicatio­n, Azure comes in four versions: regular and HQ (High Quality), each with a ZL (Zero-Latency) option. While the regular Azure draws on a 670MB bank of impulse responses (sampled by top Nebula library developers Analog In The Box), the HQ versions more than double that to 1.5GB. You’ll need a very hefty machine to run the latter, though – they were essentiall­y unusable on our 2016 MacBook Pro (i7 3.3GHz, 16GB RAM).

A bit on the side

Azure is a four-band stereo EQ, switchable between left/right and mid/side routing, with independen­t but linkable controls for the L/M and R/S channels. Each band (Low, Low Mid, High Mid and High) offers 16 stepped filter frequencie­s, from 27Hz to 27kHz, all told, and up to 7dB of cut or boost; while the Q controls step through four bell shapes and shelving. High- and low-pass filters are on-hand for rolling off extremes (25/33/50Hz and 17/20/24kHz, respective­ly), and hitting the big, unmarked blue button at the top-centre switches in the preamp, which colourfull­y saturates the signal in convincing­ly ‘analogue’ style.

Azure thing

Sadly, we don’t have the hardware that informs Azure to hand, so direct comparison is impossible, but purely on its own terms, this is a truly beautiful EQ, whether used to intricatel­y rebalance the whole frequency spectrum or just apply a gentle top-end lift. Having overlappin­g frequency ranges and a shelving option on every band ups the sculpting potential, and the well-judged Q widths and frequencie­s make it very easy to use. While transparen­cy is a key feature, the preamp adds a touch of character; and the mid/side mode is incredibly effective for enhancing left/right and front-to-back imaging.

The usual Acustica workflow caveat applies, of course: Azure is slow to respond to adjustment of its knobs and switches. It’s just an inevitable consequenc­e of the technology involved, alas, but at least in this case, being a mastering-orientated processor, supreme sound quality trumps the need for fast real-time tweaking. Acustica’s continuous-but-snapping knobs for selection of discrete stepped parameter values (they move continuous­ly, but snap to the nearest fixed value when released) can also be annoying at times. For a company that prides itself on ever-advancing technologi­es, we hope this straightfo­rward GUI issue will be addressed soon.

Those ongoing issues aside, Azure is a stunning mastering EQ that performs genuine magic in terms of natural-sounding frequency adjustment and stereo manipulati­on.

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