Yamaha Vintage Plugin Collection New! File
This plugin goes far beyond a simple EQ curve. It allows you to choose tape types (like new BASF or older Ampex), tape speed (15 or 30 ips), and adjust parameters like bias, EQ, and input drive to control the level of saturation and compression. The Vintage Open Deck bundle was priced at approximately .
While Yamaha owns the license to the DX7 sound, they historically partnered with Native Instruments to create FM8 . However, the modern integrates seamlessly with Steinberg’s Backbone and Padshop , but more importantly, includes official presets and components from the DX7 .
If you produce Synthwave, Lo-Fi Hip Hop, Vaporwave, Indie Rock, or Techno, these plugins deserve a permanent spot in your channel strip. They won't replace your ValhallaDSP or your FabFilter bundle—and they aren't trying to. They are simply offering you a key to a specific, beloved, and rapidly fading sonic past. yamaha vintage plugin collection
The Vintage Channel Strip is the workhorse of the collection, consisting of three plugins designed to replicate the input stages of classic consoles.
In the modern digital age, the "analog warmth" of tape is highly sought after. The plugin is Yamaha's answer to this, utilizing VCM technology to emulate the complex circuitry and magnetic characteristics of vintage reel-to-reel tape machines. The plugin offers four distinct tape machine models: This plugin goes far beyond a simple EQ curve
The REV7 plugin meticulously models the early digital algorithms and the unique converters of the original. Unlike algorithmic reverbs today that aim for photorealistic spaces, the REV7 creates "impressionist" spaces—they sound like a reverb unit , not a concert hall.
Take a dry vocal. Send 100% wet to the Analog Delay . Set the time to a dotted eighth note. Crank the feedback. Now automate the delay time slightly. The digital pitch-shifting artifacts (glitches) you get are impossible to replicate with analog tape plugins; they are purely digital, purely 80s, and purely cool. While Yamaha owns the license to the DX7
: VCM models the physical characteristics of individual analog parts.
A faithful recreation of a late-1970s VCA compressor/limiter. It is highly regarded for its aggressive punch and snappy transient response. It works exceptionally well on drum busses, room mics, and bass guitars.