

The Altiverb fellows recorded various microphone positions in most of the spaces, so you can set depth and panning position. OK, this is not a film-making magazine, so let’s go to the music creating benefits. Film makers also love Altiverb 7 as it has IR convolutions for all those odd spaces like interior of various car models through countless examples of outdoor ambiance, tunnels, schools and all other imaginable places.

It was almost impossible to recreate the space where we recorded original audio.

Altiverb 7 academic sale movie#
I remember how I lost a whole day trying to edit some words in a short movie that we did for national TV. This is absolutely a life saver for all movie makers. This is not to mention that if you have recorded the bang of a slate clap or even a starter pistol at the beginning of your tape, you will be able to recreate the space of the take, recording new edited dialog dry in a studio and applying the space from the recording scene. Large groups from hardware, big halls or open spaces through to various studio rooms and some bizarre spaces that come in handy for film makers or any other purpose audio treatments. The next advantage is the great IR convolution spaces library that grows from day to day, being well categorized into large groups, allowing you to even find complementary sounding spaces. After trying it more on some other sound sources I also discovered that I couldn’t find any small or big, natural or hardware emulated space sounding as harsh as some reverbs can sometimes sound in higher frequencies. It sounded quite a bit more real than with other convolution reverbs. Altiverb 7 added space without muddying even slightly the space around the cello. I was quite surprised trying it for a first time with a dry cello track. I don’t know what the secret of Altiverb 7 is, it could be a high sample rate used for IR convolutions or maybe recording techniques used by skilled recording engineers, or perfectly chosen places, good programming, or probably all the mentioned reasons coming together to give a unique end result. Some of them add really cool and pleasant spaces around the audio object, but you can’t say that this is totally the same as listening to an instrument in a real place. The real spaces sound clean and well defined, something that is not 100% true with convolution or even algorithmic reverbs. Don’t tell me about predelay, equalizer and other things, as you know exactly what I’m talking about. All other virtual reverbs add space around the effected sound, a nice sound, but still a bit foggy and muddy. Not sure what exactly what it means in a musical sense. I presume this word means drinking Whiskey by the old stove inside a house on a cold winter’s day. Not just a difference in the range of those abstract words that no one can really properly describe, like “Warmth” for example.

So, where is that few hundred euros difference? The first thing I should say is, yes, it is worth the money, and second, yes, it makes a very noticeable difference. I have had Altiverb for almost a month and had enough time to try it with some orchestral material and some pop songs with guitars and vocals. There are plenty of enthusiasts that have sampled some great real spaces, same as some legendary reverb hardware pieces.
Altiverb 7 academic sale for free#
After all, €499 EUR for the regular version and €849 EUR for XL is quite a big price, and after all, convolution reverbs are all about the impulse responses (known as IRs) from real places which you can even get for free if you google a bit. Of course, as convolution reverbs can be found in almost every DAW, not to mention that there are also a dozen third party convolution reverbs around for a quite reasonable price (ranging from $100 to $200 USD), you probably asked yourself, as I did before I got it, whether Altiverb 7 is worth the price. I assume you’ve already heard about Altiverb, a studio standard. Do you really need a convolution reverb that costs upwards of 500 Euros? Our reviewer seems to think that with Altiverb 7, the answer unfortunately is “absolutely”.
