![]() You just unzip the download and drop it in the Effects folder inside your Reaper install folder. ReEQ and ReSpectrum, parametric equalizer and spectrum analyzer ![]() It’s not as comprehensive as a commercial product, but it does focus on the stuff many people will most need – and it’s fantastic that it’s free in REAPER, if you’re on a budget (or need to exchange project files with someone else without them also needing a plug-in license).Ĭheck the full forum page for all the updates: But I like the sound and the focus in ReEQ. In fact if you really want to work with parametric EQ a lot, and you like this, it’s probably worth buying FabFilter’s stuff. So the UI borrows very, very liberally from FabFilter’s Pro-Q 3, which in fact does a lot more (like surround sound, 24 bands, EQ matching). Note the relation of filter algorithms to Ableton Live’s excellent EQ8 (Andy Simper/Cytomic). If you like the visualization, you can also use the spectrum analyzer version of the same even when not EQing. Experts and beginners alike I think will find both creative sound design and composition applications, and precision mixing and mastering uses. It’s a labor of love, and it shows – that love comes your way. ![]() There are now analog-modeled low and high channel filter modes, 16 filter nodes (instead of 8), better performance on Windows, and – crucially – a PDF manual so you know what in the heck is going on.Īnd did I mention this is free / donationware? (So do put something in that hat, eh?) It’s even under a generous MIT open source license. ![]() So while this is old news in one sense (2018), even the last few months have brought new improvements. I’m aware my screenshots make no sense but I’m tired and – this UI is just too pretty not to make pictures with it. But it’s tough to find anything with this many shortcuts, handy features, and audio options – and the developer just keeps adding more. Yes, there are other powerful EQs like this out there. ReEQ us a feature-laden parametric EQ that covers all the bases. Just one example – this free sixteen-band EQ and spectrum analyzer, created by a user in Reaper’s JSFX*, for free, does just about everything. Cockos’ REAPER is the stupidly affordable but endlessly customizable DAW. ![]()
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