MusicRadar just published this feature on the best new free music-making software: essential freeware synths, drum machines and effects for August 2022. We’ve picked a few from the list…
Everybody loves a free plugin. We’d wager that even the most affluent music-makers, smugly reclining in their padded studio chairs while they bask in the radiant glow of a specced-out M1 Mac, feel a twinge of excitement when a gratuitous VST pops up on their 6K Retina display.
This is our monthly free software round-up’s raison d’être. It exists to serve you, the curious and financially prudent producer, in your pursuit of the internet’s finest freeware. We know you’re a busy bunch, so here we present the most intriguing freebies from our regular news coverage that you may have missed, plus anything else that’s caught our eyes (and ears) over the past 30 days.
IK multimedia mixbox
Without further ado, let’s dive into this month’s goodies, which include an orchestral offering from Spitfire Audio, an 8-module effects rack from IK Multimedia and not one, but two lo-fi vibe-shapers.
IK Multimedia’s MixBox is a colossal modular effects package that gives users the ability to build a complete processing chain within a single plugin. The paid version is certainly worth your consideration, but what we’re really here for is MixBox CS, a slimmed-down version that IK are giving away absolutely free.
This should give you a taste of what MixBox has to offer, as it comes bundled with 8 starter modules (including a compressor, tape delay and overdrive) equipped with over 30 presets to help you get started. Pro tip: IK have a ton of other free stuff, including a free version of their flagship soft synth Syntronik 2, available on their website – go take a look.
Novation B- and V-station
Built to emulate two of the company’s ‘90s/noughties hardware synths, Novation’s Bass Station and V-Station plugins are now pretty long in the tooth themselves. In fact, the company has now discontinued them as commercial products and made them available for free as ‘legacy’ software. It’s worth bearing in mind that there’s no guarantee that they’ll be compatible with your OS and DAW.
Bass Station is designed to create the monophonic 1993 hardware of the same name in your DAW. Like the original, which was used on countless dance records in the ‘90s, it offers two digital oscillators and an analogue filter. V-Station, meanwhile, is an emulation of the K-Station synth that was released in 2002. It has a 3-oscillator sound engine with noise and FM capabilities, an arpeggiator, effects, 200 user programs and 200 factory presets.
Spitfire BBC Symphony Orchestra
Previously available either for $49 or as a free download to anyone who was prepared to answer a questionnaire and then wait 14 days, Spitfire Audio’s BBC Symphony Orchestra Discover plugin is now free for everyone.
Designed to be an easy-to-use entry point into the world of orchestral composition, Discover features 33 instruments (these cover strings, woodwinds, brass and percussion) and 47 playing techniques, all mixed into a single signal. The instrument offers simple controls and weighs in at just 200MB, though Spitfire claims that the sound is “remarkable” nonetheless.
Karplus synth
This free synth from developer Nathan Blair is a nifty little plugin that makes use of Karplus-Strong synthesis, a variant of physical modelling synthesis that’s often used to emulate the sound of a plucked or bowed string, or just to design synth sounds with a string-like character. Karp has an undeniably pleasing, elastic tone to it – sample the sound in the video above.
Subharmonic bass booster
Bass sounds are notoriously difficult to design, mix and process in comparison to the higher-frequency elements of a track. It’s especially tough to achieve an impactful, sub-heavy bass sound that doesn’t overwhelm the rest of your mix. Substrate’s new free plugin, the Subharmonic Bass Booster, may be able to help you in that regard. Designed to embellish your low-end with additional sub-harmonics, it should make sub bass frequencies more audible on weaker systems.
Pneuma
Pneuma is a subtractive polyphonic synthesizer plugin that’s absolutely packed with features. Equipped with four multi-voice oscillators, one noise oscillator and two sample oscillators, it’s got a multi-mode filter, two LFOs and a modulation matrix for tone-shaping and sound design. The real draw here is the bumper FX capabilities: Pneuma comes with an EQ, chorus, phaser, delay, reverb, compressor, saturation and distortion all built in. It’s a shame it’s not Mac-compatible.
Vibes
If your tracks are falling short in the vibes department, look no further than Viator DSP’s Vibe Mechanic, a new lo-fi effects plugin that’s “designed to give you different vibe-shaping flavors.” Vibe Mechanic does it’s magic by running audio through EQ, distortion and reverb modules, which can each be manipulated and controlled independently. That’s good vibes.
Have a look at the full list at the Musicradar website.