Slate Digital – VIRTUAL CONSOLE COLLECTION – Analog Mixing Plug-in
The VIRTUAL CONSOLE COLLECTION consists of two plugins, Virtual Channel and Virtual Mixbuss. Each plugin allows the user to choose from one of six modeled consoles. Virtual Channel is applied on individual mixing channels. Virtual Mixbuss goes on the first insert of the master fader. When using the Virtual Console Collection, your DAW instantly takes on
the personality of a real analog mixing desk. The imaging and depth improves, instruments sit better in the frequency spectrum, and mixing becomes easier and more musical. You can even push the DAW faders up to find each mixer’s ‘sweet spot’. This is due to the algorithms being dynamic, just like a real console.Read more
From Slate Digital Co-founder Steven Slate:The Virtual Console Collection has been a dream of mine for years. I've always mixed on analog consoles because I love the color and sound that they provide, and I missed it while trying to mix "in the box".
The Folcrom allowed me to get the best of both worlds, and I've used it on hundreds of mixes and productions with great results. However, after creating Slate Digital with Fabrice Gabriel almost two years ago, one of the first things we looked in to was recreating the sound of analog mixing, but with digital.
This first lead us to the question: What is wrong with digital summing?
To answer this question, we first built our own digital summing buss. In fact we built three of them. Our conclusion?
NOTHING. Nothing at all is "wrong" about digital summing, whether it be fixed integer or floating point, dithered or undithered... None of these things had an audible effect that any human could pick out in a blind A/B test.
No, actually the problem is with analog summing. With an analog console, the audio path contains a lot of circuitry. By the time a mix is summed in an analog console and gets passed to the outputs, it contains varied degrees of harmonic distortion, phase distortion, and noise. However, it is these nonlinearities that sound "musical" to the human ear.
Fabrice Gabriel is not only a genius at audio DSP, but he has a degree in electrical engineering. He was able to carefully analyze the schematics of all the great mixing consoles and produce individual DSP modules that reproduce various parts of the circuit path, from line input amplifiers to fader buffers to summing amps. Over the past year, we then tweaked the modules by EAR in a mastering room to precisely match the hundreds of test files that were processed with each console.
Keep in mind, that an analog console is a dynamic instrument. As you begin to push the faders into the mix buss, the amplifiers start to reach their threshold and various changes occur in the harmonics and overall sound. This is all recreated in this plugin suite.
In conclusion, I'm so proud of this plugin, and I think it will change the way many people think of "mixing in the box". As we've been developing the Virtual Console Collection, we've been pleased to see other digital models of analog mixing pop up (such as the Harrison Mixbuss), showing us that this was an important issue for the audio industry, and we're glad to add to it.
The Virtual Console Collection is RTAS, VST, AU on both Mac and PC, and along with the whole Slate Digital line, will now be available very soon with a 14 day demo. I'm eager for you all to try them.
- Steven Slate











