Filters guide
Filters are essential creative tools. The term filter is defined as a unit that can amplify or attenuate frequencies. The meaning for the audio community has changed however and there are now various filters that make all kinds of changes to any audio signal you feed them.
Table of contents
Distorting filters
Distorting filters became especially famous in the dubstep era. The idea is simple - first distort the signal to generate lots of higher harmonics, then filter some of it away it, and, well, do it again... That gives distorting filters a unique character and makes them useful on pretty much any audio material. But of course, wobbling bases are the signature sound.
MWobbler
A unique distorting filter for dubstep wobbling basses, rhythmic pads, rotary organs...
Classic filters
Everyone knows how a low-pass filter sounds, it's still used daily by musicians and DJs. But that's just the beginning!
MBandPass
A powerful filter plugin with high-pass and low-pass filters and slopes up to 120dB/oct.
MFilter
A filter that can probably do more than you ever thought possible.
Comb filters
Comb filters have a very distinctive sound. They are essentially microscopic delays and as such they can be taken to a whole new level producing all kinds of mixtures of filtering, delay and reverberation.
MComb
An extremely powerful multi-comb filter plugin with 2 super-powerful modulators.
MCombMB
An extremely versatile multi-comb filter, designed for those seeking truly unique sound!
Vocoders
Yes, that's correct, vocoders are just filters, pretty complex ones though. And they can do much more than the robotic sounds for which they are so famous.
MVocoder
Robotic voices, singing synthesizers... a vocoder with ultimate audio quality and features.