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Magnetophon Lamb v2.0.0 Win Mac Linux [FREE] screenshot
Free | Win Mac Linux | 45 MB
A lookahead compressor/limiter that's soft as a lamb.
Lamb was made with these goals in mind:
Sound as clean as possible and as dirty as desired.
Give the user full control over the character with the minimum amount of knobs.

Features:

The following features set it apart from other compressor/limiters:

Use it as a brickwall limiter, a compressor, a leveler, a waveshaper/clipper or anything in between.
As long as the ratio is inf:1, the lookahead is 100% and the output gain is 0dB, the output will not exceed the threshold1.
When the attack, release, release hold and adaptive release are all at their minimum value, you get a waveshaper/clipper.
When adaptive release is at 100%, you get a leveler.

Adjust the shape of the attack and release.
The inspiration for this came from a video by Dan Worrall.
When shape is at 0, the curve is a slice of pure sine.

Magnetophon Lamb v2.0.0 Win Mac Linux [FREE] screenshot

No discontinuities in the derivative of the gain reduction.
The gain never abruptly changes direction, resulting in a smoother sound, even at short attack and release times.

Release hold eliminates distortion while keeping most of the level.
Release hold prevents the gain from coming up if it needs to go back down again soon.
You control how soon is soon.
Here's a gain reduction graph with and without it:

Magnetophon Lamb v2.0.0 Win Mac Linux [FREE] screenshot

Adaptive release (optionally) prevents pumping.
With adaptive release, the gain won't rush up too much when there is a quiet part after a big peak, but it will still react quickly to transients.
The first couple of dB of release have the speed you set with the release knob, after that it slows down.
The adaptive release slider controls how many dBs will release fast and how much it will slow down afterwards.
If you DO want obvious pumping, just turn adaptive release off!

Exact attack and release times allow you to easily match any breathing to the tempo of your track.
In most compressors and limiters, the times describe how long it takes to do "most" of the gain change.
In lamb, 500 ms corresponds to exactly 1/4 note at 120 BPM.

Adjust the amount of stereo linkage.
Most limiters are fully stereo linked. This makes sense, since you don't want the stereo image to shift.
However, if the asymmetry in gain reduction is small and short enough, you won't notice any shift in stereo image.
(Partially) unlinking left and right can sometimes sound more natural, because a loud sound on one side won't make the other side duck in level.
Slower changes in gain reduction, caused by adaptive release, are always fully linked.
You can set the amount of linkage for transients as needed.

Choose between fixed or minimum latency.
In most case, you can leave this at fixed, but if you want to use lamb live or for tracking, you can set it to minimum.
The latency is always reported to the host.

Downsides:

There are two main downsides to this plugin:

Heavy on the CPU.
Because of the advanced algorithm, this plugin is quite heavy.
I have done everything in my power to make it lighter, from writing a highly optimized sliding minimum algorithm
to writing an N dimensional memoization function.
If you are good at math or computer science and want to help me optimize it more, open an issue, or better yet a PR!
Long latency.
The clean sound of this plugin is partially made possible by a copious amount of lookahead.
In fixed latency mode, the latency is 100ms.
In minimum latency mode, the latency depends on the attack, release hold and lookahead parameters.


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comments

  Member 12.12.2023 308 1764
+6966
Rapidgator | KatFile | NitroFlare
  Member 21.06.2018 81 10057
+2652
  Member 14.12.2021 316
+100
the Comment has been Removed
  Member 21.09.2023 1 225
+111
do not sleep on this dev soley based on the shit UI. He makes some really interesting stuff. His spectral compressor is very unique and very cool for both critical mixing and sound design stuff
  Resident 24.07.2019 15 878
+804
I think you're confusing this dev with Robert van der Helm/nih-plugs. This is not the same dev AFAIK, but they both make plugins with Rust (probably why their UIs look similar).
  Member 17.10.2016 33 445
+1875
Fuck, I was excited for a second
  Resident 26.04.2021 17 119
+622
Dev received support from NIH read the 'Thanks' section on GitHub
080
  Resident 24.07.2019 15 878
+804
I noticed that he had forked something from nih-plugs as well. The Rust audio DSP community seems pretty tight knit overall! They have some of the most interesting projects going on over at GitHub IMO.
  Member 27.04.2022 424
+62
https://nightly.link/robbert-vdh/nih-plug/workflows/build/master

Interesting.
Thanks for the heads up.
  Member 21.09.2023 1 225
+111
thanks for the heads up! sorry guys for spreading miss information!
  Resident 24.07.2019 15 878
+804
No worries. The title of the release states the correct dev, which is really all that matters. It's easy to confuse the two since the UIs look so similar, and it seems Robert van der Helm did help this dev with making the plugin, so you weren't far off.
  Resident 24.07.2019 15 878
+804
Been testing this one on and off for the last couple of weeks. This is a seriously good compressor/limiter! The only things it's missing that would make it a perfect stock compressor/limiter alternative are internal sidechain filters (for use in compression mode), and an external sidechain (both for sidechain compression and stem mastering).

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