One of three new plugins in Cableguys’ Shaper line (the other two being FilterShaper Core and WidthShaper), (which runs in the VST/AU ShaperBox plugin - see What’s in the ShaperBox) modulates the position of a virtual ‘playhead’ in the incoming audio signal relative to its linear playback position. This results in all manner of glitching, beat repeating, stuttering, warping, scratching, reversing, tape stop/start and pitching effects. The modulation signal itself is generated by an LFO, the waveform of which is drawn into the graphical curve editor that dominates the GUI. The speed of the LFO can be tempo-synced to the host DAW or set manually in Hz.
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Most of the time, you’ll be running it synced, although unsynced mode, maxing out as it does at 5.24kHz, certainly has plenty of FM/AM/ PM-esque creative potential for those who dare to push the boundaries. Making waves The LFO editor shows the incoming waveform in real time with the LFO waveshape overlaid on top, against a background grid divided into 16 steps horizontally and four main levels vertically.
Audio plugins for Win + Mac. Fully functional demos of Curve, FilterShaper, VolumeShaper.
The Loop Length - ie, LFO speed - ranges from 1/128 to 32 bars, while the maximum range of the LFO - ie, the greatest extent of time by which the input signal can be offset - can be set to automatically match the Loop Length or fixed at 1, 2, 4 or 8 bars in the Max Offset menu. The editor implements the same flexible node-based system as TimeShaper’s stablemates for the construction of intricate curves and sequences. Fundamentally, the green line represents the time offset, with playback position unaffected when it’s at the top of the display, and displaced by the Max Offset amount at the bottom. With Loop Length set to 1 Bar and a four-to-the-floor drum loop playing, for example, setting the curve at beat 2 to the ‘-1/4’ line pulls the audio back in time by one quarter-note, so you’ll hear the kick drum from beat 1 instead of the expected snare. For that sort of basic beat rearrangement and stuttering, Step Draw mode - activated in the palette of tools to the bottom right of the display - adds a square step, defined by four nodes, to the curve, one grid column wide (so a 16th-note if Loop Length is 1 Bar, an eighth-note if it’s 2 Bars, etc) at the point clicked. Gtkterm [alernative To Hyperterminal Of Windows] more. Dragging left and right without any vertical deviation before releasing the mouse buttons extends the step, and moving it up and down obviously sets its timing offset.