Nice of you Keys! Thank you.
Have had the United Audio marketing newsletters taunting me all this month
I'm probably going to break and end up getting the full version - has 'warble' control which is not in the freebie but also, full ver has final output gain control as well as of course more choice (and I think actually nicer results for more variety/fine tuning things). But - good free plugin indeed for a little (or a lot) quick/easy analog hype.
I haven't yet bought these (or leapt on the freebie) because I've over-satisfied all my needs in re these types of tools (for me they didn't add to my workflow, only kind of tempt me to not get as creative in my own way with more editable tools with more control) - but they are easy to use and can make it so that really, probably most users don't need to fuss with infinite options in tape emulators to get a desirable sound.
Any such simplification of processes, to enable exceptionally easy usability like that however does come at the expense of, I believe anyway, some good amount of choice (not a snob thing - a genuine creative necessity), and effectively also some realism. But that won't concern many I'm sure.
I really enjoy one of their other tape products, Studer A800 Multichannel Tape Recorder plug-in
There's also a 'gang control' in the Studer 800 plugin, which means you can place an instance on as many tracks as your projects have, and control them all from one instance (think getting the broad kind of sound you wish to hear by the end).. but not to limit us, once basically happy, you can turn off 'ganging' and further individually tweak each track's tape unit to suit their own individual tracks if desired (like a little more/less, some different tape speed for drums, or more sparkly tones for a certain instrument) etc. It's handy - and may save a lot of time bothering with super specific EQ plugins (in analog times, for sure, you may EQ too on the strip - but if you have the option to put sizzle on tape, you may not want to lift trebles with EQ.. just a 'do two things with one action' kind of comfort). This (and maybe about 3 other tape plugins I really think get 'old-school' emulation into a particularly realistic range) have their use cases - some do better with certain instrumentation, or for a certain 'market/genre'.
I don't turn to that plugin for heading toward Lo-Fi so much though.. but nothing wrong with a nice tape wrapper on anything really.. I guess it's worth blathering on some more for anyone curious..
There's also 'Tape' from Softube - emulates 3 different pretty fine tape machines, but instead of a 'gang' control, has a similar way to work in Studio One (on the 'MixFX' insert). For glitch sounds, it saturates pretty hard, pretty quick - like the compressor claps out in a not-too-harsh kind of way, leaving a nice flat ceiling with that vintage burn.
Plenty of plugins are out there emulating more particularly glitchy tape types.. in like cheap cassette players etc. - but the world of glitched audio is full of so many amazing saturation/tape plugins, seems actually would be difficult to list even a short-list of fav ones.
Quick aside - kind of like tape saturation inre Lo-Fi.. this got my attention today..
This morning, got wind of this nice saturation sim, Bad Speaker from Softube. I have tomorrow to check it out - but it solves a lack of 'speaker' break-up in 'digital saturation' (at least it sounds and looks to do that), so far. Don't want to read too much into it just yet (haven't heard enough yet).. but hoping this scratches a long-time itch of mine.. I have all the circuitry emulations I need but, other than 'cabinet simulations' (aimed at guitar use-cases but.. no rules!), I don't have something which alone deals with 'that kind of side of distortion' which is not so much about driving internals, but 'what the speaker' does.
If anyone likes the sound of that kind of speaker driven glitch, it is also in a good Lo-Fi leaning bundle the Dirty the Bad the Wasted - Softube collection bundle - I have already the Wasted Space 80s-like reverb (actually does take me back to the 80s). But - there's a 'Dirty Tape' plugin in this bundle, which is why I mention all this here really. I don't have that but like the 'Tape' one, for glitch use-cases, it seems to have a nice 'collapse' when driven (I just imagine it easy to run of dozens of loops with it, with less need to tame things in a longer workflow). Anyway - nice pack if you want a glitch toolkit going pretty authentic in the retro sense. I'll probably cross-grade just to get the Bad Speaker one in the end.
Actually - on seeing this nice old thread again, and Key Fumbler's helpful link - I ended up quickly going through some tape plugins I use (and some others) to give any curious readers here a little bit of inspiration perhaps.
It should be stated though.. that these audio files are quick and dirty Lo-Fi leaning uses of these kinds of tape plugins - and if you kind of like aspects of one or another maybe that'll help you decide if you want to go grab a tape emulation plugin to get Lo-Fi things in that range. It's possible to push things to even more glitchy Lo-Fi oriented 8bit kinds of sounds too.. but with nice glowing saturations which can make very plain glitch piano more creamy and dreamy.
Caveat though.. none of these are meant to make the piano sound 'nicer', nor more perfect, nor more realistic.. it's all about that kind of Lo-Fi leaning recording domain.. It often happens that people mistake this.. "well that doesn't make the piano sound more realistic" - not supposed to do that.. if anything most of these are what I call 'pushed' or 'hyped' - just hoping to solve a few people scratching their head and thinking "Wow tape sounds awful"... but of course, you can use various of these tape plugins really respecting 'good practices' of old.. and get some tastefully delicious or nearly completely in-obvious top-shelf politeness from them too - but that's not what these are 'hyped' to kind of showcase..
List of tape emulation audio examples (same 20 second block of piano) with no other FX. The source piano is the default Grotrian "Recording 2" preset:
Piano-loop-no-tape-CLEAN.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Mix-Checker-Pro.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Porta-Cassette-Studio-One.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Kiive-Tape-Face.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Softube-Tape.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Tone-Empire-ReelightPro.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-UAD-Studer-800-Tape-Recorder-A.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-UAD-Studer-800-Tape-Recorder-B.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-WavesFactory-Cassette-A.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-WavesFactory-Cassette-B.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Waves-Abbey-Road-J37-A.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Waves-Abbey-Road-J37-B.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Waves-Abbey-Road-J37-C.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Waves-Abbey-Road-J37-D.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Waves-Kramer-Tape-A.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-iZotope-Ozone-Vintage-Tape.mp3
Some great tape machines of old incorporated various kinds of echos (extra read head trickery), slapback, ping-pong and the Abbey Road one probably gives the most options both quite realistically and in some artistically exciting ways. Nothing stopping anyone from leveraging that 'real' kind of machine created sound with other FX.
These 2 below are some 'multi FX' combinations made up with up to 6 other FX types to further take the sound into sound design territory (I think of these FX arrays for use in a track building, using the source more like an electronic 'pad' than piano and each of these 2 are rather like starting points for further working into a piece. I guess genre would be something unclassified at this stage of those 2, but could go in a lot of directions, if playing more or different parts etc. They're not finished things in short but give an idea of how you can use digital tools to get Lo-Fi granular FX and "soften" them up somewhat with tape emulation plugins.. really nice to 'smear' any particularly clippy digital choppiness.)
Piano-loop-tape-Personal-multi-FX-A.mp3
Piano-loop-tape-Personal-Multi-FX-B.mp3
Hope anyone thinking about this stuff can get a feel for how Pianoteq is an absolute dream for processing for all kinds of music, and Lo-Fi, Glitch, Electronica of all kinds - just so much better than struggling with other software pianos.. both easier, smaller in footprint, more editable, more playable and did I mention it's good? Well, anyway - I think it's still the one virtual instrument keeping my focus even after many years now. SO good imho.
Pianoteq Studio Bundle (Pro plus all instruments) - Kawai MP11 digital piano - Yamaha HS8 monitors