This is interesting. Here is a new spatialization program:
https://room360plugin.com/
It uses Raytracing to create an algorithmic reverberation. You can place your source anywhere on the stage. Choose a radiation pattern for the source. Place a mic setup anywhere in the room. And you define where the walls are. It's pretty simple to use. I am testing the demo, and the results sound very good. It does not color the sound in any way. Here is an overview about the features:
Radiation patterns currently include Omni, Voice, Brass, Woodwinds, and Strings. There are five mic types to choose from. More to follow (hopefully). In case your wondering, Room360 does sync between instances. If you place the VST3 on several tracks, you will see all the sources in every instance.
There is a free demo that is fully functional apart from not saving any changes. Full price is 99$.
I will compare it to my usual reverb setups when I have the time. First results were promising.
There's more than meets the eye
Register now to unlock all subforums. As a guest, your view is limited to only a part of The Sound Board.
Room360 - Spatializer
Re: Room360 - Spatializer
Any competition to SPAT?
Re: Room360 - Spatializer
Looks cool. The choice of microphones is a bit strange imo. But certainly worth to check out.
Re: Room360 - Spatializer
Only partly, Larry. The concept is similar. However, SPAT is more advanced, has a more refined GUI and offers much greater customisation. Room360 only has a handful of parameters to control. For example, it is not possible to adjust the reverb except through some attributes of the atmosphere (temperature and humidity), and, more importantly, the surface (reflectivity and diffusitivity). You have no control over reverb density, early reflections, wet/dry ratio or RT60. All of these are indirectly influenced by the room you define. The wet/dry ratio, for instance, is affected by the size of the room, the proximity of the microphones to the source and the proximity of the walls. This is more true to reality than what SPAT does. However, it is also less directly controllable.
Fortunately, the results you get straight out of the box sound very good. Simply set the room size, place the source and microphones in the room, and you will achieve good-sounding results. As mentioned, the reverberation is very transparent. There is no colouration of the sound. Yet the result does not sound like a dry source with artificial reverb. If you position the source further back in the room, the close-mic effect vanishes. I haven't tried it with Sample Modeling Brass yet. That will be instructive.
I will also have to test whether you can automate the parameters and whether you can move a source without artefacts while playing. As far as I know, that's unique to SPAT and something that is important to Piet.
Markus, are there any particular microphones that you would like to see implemented? The developer is on VI-C and might be open to suggestions. If you want to eliminate the microphone as a variable as much as possible, you can always just use the omnidirectional microphone. I used the standard SM57 configuration in my earlier test, which sounded fine to me.
Fortunately, the results you get straight out of the box sound very good. Simply set the room size, place the source and microphones in the room, and you will achieve good-sounding results. As mentioned, the reverberation is very transparent. There is no colouration of the sound. Yet the result does not sound like a dry source with artificial reverb. If you position the source further back in the room, the close-mic effect vanishes. I haven't tried it with Sample Modeling Brass yet. That will be instructive.
I will also have to test whether you can automate the parameters and whether you can move a source without artefacts while playing. As far as I know, that's unique to SPAT and something that is important to Piet.
Markus, are there any particular microphones that you would like to see implemented? The developer is on VI-C and might be open to suggestions. If you want to eliminate the microphone as a variable as much as possible, you can always just use the omnidirectional microphone. I used the standard SM57 configuration in my earlier test, which sounded fine to me.
-
- Posts: 3641
- Joined: Aug 05, 2015 3:57 am
Re: Room360 - Spatializer
Sounds very useful and there is a small void in my plug-in toolbox where something like Room360 would certainly fit, but when I tried to demo it (as an AU in Logic) I ran into all sorts of problems, so serious that restarting Logic wasn’t enough to make them go away; I had to restart my Mac. Not a good sign.
Also, neither of the plug-in formats (AU and VST3) is recognized by either Nugen’s SigMod or AudioGridder (haven’t tried Metaplug yet and I won’t because that one takes ages to scan the available plug-ins), so demoing Room360 by hosting it outside of Logic was no option either.
And going the VEPro way, was also not a success because, while the VST3-version of the plug-in seems to load and work nicely as long as VEPro is the active window, the moment you click anywhere on the Logic GUI (making it the active window), Room360, for some reason, immediately starts to crackle and stutter.
All of which makes me wonder if Room360 is perhaps more Windows- than Mac-friendly?
__
Also, neither of the plug-in formats (AU and VST3) is recognized by either Nugen’s SigMod or AudioGridder (haven’t tried Metaplug yet and I won’t because that one takes ages to scan the available plug-ins), so demoing Room360 by hosting it outside of Logic was no option either.
And going the VEPro way, was also not a success because, while the VST3-version of the plug-in seems to load and work nicely as long as VEPro is the active window, the moment you click anywhere on the Logic GUI (making it the active window), Room360, for some reason, immediately starts to crackle and stutter.
All of which makes me wonder if Room360 is perhaps more Windows- than Mac-friendly?
__
-
- Posts: 901
- Joined: Nov 01, 2015 3:19 pm
- Location: Visby Sweden
- Contact:
Re: Room360 - Spatializer
Interesting, will need to try this one. Reminds me of the old Rayspace from "waybackthen"...
https://www.quikquak.com/prod_rayspace.html
https://www.quikquak.com/prod_rayspace.html
Time is life, use it wisely.