2 Boz Digital Labs Little Clipper
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Little Clipper is the little sibling to Big Clipper. Little Clipper includes only the essential features you need, along with input and threshold metering, to quickly and easily dial in the perfect amount of clipping to enhance individual tracks, stereo busses, or full mixes. Just set and go.
Little Clipper is a powerful tool for enhancing and shaping the sound of your audio recordings. With its intuitive interface and versatile features, this plugin is designed to help you achieve professional-quality results with ease.
Just like the constellations they’re named for, Little Clipper is a smaller, but no less capable version of the Big Clipper. Both provide a path to the sonic benefits of clipping combined with limiting, but the Little Clipper offers a simpler and more direct route in applications where you don’t require the shaping, blending, and frequency sensitivity controls of the Big Clipper. Little Clipper combines a variable clipping algorithm with limiting in three simple controls. The two main knobs, Push (clipping) and Pull (limiting), control the intensity of clipping and amount of limiting. A slider beneath the Pull knob lets you control the shape of clipping from soft to hard, depending on how subtle or aggressive you want the clipping to be. Between the knobs are meters that show incoming level and threshold, above which clipping occurs. Little Clipper has a toolbar that provides presets, A/B banks for comparison, a blend knob, bypass, and most significantly, a selector that lets you choose between stereo, mid + side, mid only, and side only processing. Once you experience how easy it is to balance instruments and vocals in a mix with Little Clipper, you’ll feel like you’re cheating.
Little Clipper allows you to easily adjust the amount of clipping applied to your audio signal, giving you greater control over the distortion and saturation of your sound. Whether you’re looking to add subtle warmth or aggressive grit to your tracks, this plugin makes it easy to dial in the perfect amount of clipping to suit your needs.
In addition to its clipping capabilities, Little Clipper also features a range of other useful tools and functions, including hard/soft clipping, mid-side processing, and adjustable oversampling. With these features, you can further shape and refine the sound of your recordings, ensuring that they sound their best in any mix or production.
Little Clipper Features
- Hard/Soft Clipping
- Intuitive Input Gain and Ceiling controls
- Mix knob for blending your dry sound back in
- Multiple stereo configurations for clipping stereo buses
- Oversampling
Simple to Use
Sometimes you just need a quick set of controls to get the job done. Little Clipper gives you exactly this. No extra fluff or nonsense. It gives you everything you need to set your clipping levels and move on to your mix.
Little Clipper—Cracking the Code
Wait, what? Sonic benefits of clipping? Aren’t we supposed to avoid clipping?
We’ve all been there: You’ve got your mix sounding the way you want; drums are punchy and prominent, you snare has power and punch, but then you look at the track overload meters in the red and think you need to pull levels down to prevent all the clipping (which you didn’t hear). So you start pulling down the faders and all of sudden, your snare becomes a snore, your entire mix, once awake and exciting, is now a snooze fest. You’ve just experienced the benefits of clipping.
Clipping is the analog of overdriven tube distortion and tape saturation (see what we did there?), both meant to be avoided, but engineers with golden ears discovered that distortion, albeit counter-intuitively, provided a means of making instruments and vocals stand out in a mix with clarity. The distortion itself wasn’t heard unless you pushed it too hard. Currently, there is no shortage of analog distortion generators in both hardware and modeling software.
As we said, clipping is the analogous form of distortion in digital systems. Analog distortion mostly took the form of gentle clipping and saturation, which softened transients and added rich harmonics. Digital clipping does the same thing, but with a narrower window between pleasing and unusable. It’s easy to overdo digital clipping, but when judiciously applied, it can make mixing easier. Elements in a mix fall into place more easily, while dynamics are more controlled and transparent. This is due to softened transients preventing compressors from punching holes in your mix (everything beneath a transient gets pushed down by the compressor). Digital clipping can bring cohesion or glue to mix, and when combined with limiting, can help you emerge victorious from the loudness wars—victory is yours.
Little Clipper Controls:
Little Clipper has the essential features needed to quickly and easily dial in the perfect amount of clipping. “Push” controls the input gain of the clipping algorithm. The harder you drive the input, the harder the clipping. The “Pull” knob adjusts the clipping threshold. Anything above the threshold is clipped, anything below is untouched. A Hard/Soft slider lets you shape the clipping from soft and smooth to bright with bite. Between the Push and Pull knobs are meters that show you input level and threshold. Levels are displayed in blue, while the amount of clipping is shown above the input level in red.
Stereo or Mid/Side
Little Clipper lets you choose your channel configuration for stereo tracks. Clipping often sounds much more natural in Mid/Side mode on stereo buses. It even lets you clip only the mid, which is good for mono tracks, such as bass, kick drum, and snare), or side channels only, giving you even more control over clipping.
Applications:
Just like all effects, clipping is bad when you do it haphazardly. When used with purposeful intent, it’s a very powerful tool that can increase apparent dynamics while keeping peaks under control. It’s especially powerful on drums. Just a little bit of clipping before a compressor on a snare drum will give your compressor much more natural sounding, predictable results. Or say you have a snare performance with ghost notes that you’d like to bring out for groove purposes. You could use a multi-band expander, but then you run the risk of emphasizing “singing” toms (toms ringing on in sympathy with the kit). Little Clipper, on the other hand, will bring up the ghost notes without the tom song. And speaking of toms, nothing gives them more attitude without amplitude than a Little Clipper. Just add a touch of push and toms come forward. Use it on a drum sub-mix in M-S mode, and hear the drums take on a three-dimensional quality, thanks to its enhancing effects on ambience.
Convinced?
If you’re still not sure about the beneficial effects of clipping, here’s a closing quote from audio pioneer, Dr. Richard Heyser, who invented Time Delay Spectrometry, the first means of measuring speaker response in real-world environments:
“The next time you hear an argument between a technologist and golden ear about the audibility of certain types of distortion…is it possible they do not agree because each has a view through a different window?”
Or, you could simply download a demo of Little Clipper, put your golden ears to work, and hear it for yourself.
Description
System Requirements
This plugin was crafted to be as light as possible on your CPU, enabling you to put this on many tracks without eating up your processing power. For Mac, you must be running OSX 10.5 or greater. For windows, you need Windows XP or greater.
Available Formats
This plugin is available in both 32 and 64 bit versions of each format (except RTAS, which is 32 bit only). It is available in the following formats:
Change Log
What’s new in version 2
- Resizable Interface.
- Native Apple Silicon.
- Asymmetrical distortion.
- Oversampling.