![]() ![]() Īnyway, I mention it in part because once you've bought Nebula, all the reverb libraries for it are very inexpensive - and of course it also supports running the libraries to color the reverb after the fact very well. There's a SoundCloud clip on his page that plays the original hardware followed by the Nebula library so you can get a sense for the similarity and differences. Nebula is a beast in terms of CPU and latency for that, but it sound noticeably better for these types of reverbs.Īnd in terms of algorithmic units - if you like that sound there are several Nebula libraries based on that two. Real spaces are one thing (and convolution often does a great job with them) but I can tell you that for springs, Nebula can completely outperform normal convolution when sampled well. RoomHunters will soon have another one of their multi-position acoustic libraries back up for Nebula called Theater of Life that is also interesting, but I haven't had a chance to try it yet. In my normal workflow I use either Numerical Sound impulses (like FORTI or SERTI) or EOS (which I got years ago and is frugal on the CPU) or I use Acustica Arts Nebula 3.6 Pro/Server with 3rd party libraries taken from physical plates or springs from Cupwise, Tim Petherick or VNXT - and I am looking forward to trying one by STN once they get it back up on their site again. ![]() ![]() And just to revisit my earlier comment, since someone mentioned Nebula. ![]()
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