Like other Eiosis plug–ins, E2 Transienter is available in TDM and all common native formats on Mac and PC, and can be authorised either to an iLok or a Syncrosoft key. This is useful for audibly checking the settings of the transient–detection algorithm, but also makes it possible to achieve much more radical processing: you can use two instances of the processor on two copies of the same source material to create separate transient and non–transient signals that can be routed to other plug–ins. Transients and non–transients are then processed completely independently, before being combined at the output stage and, as with the de–esser, it's possible to solo either half of the signal. In other words, input audio first passes through a detection circuit, which decides whether what it's hearing is a transient or not. The latest product in the E2 series is a transient processor that works along similar lines. You could think of it as functioning like a gate that separates sibilants from other sounds, ensuring that the rest of your vocal remains completely untouched, no matter what you do to the 'esses' and 'tees'. Eiosis' innovative plug–in processor allows you to completely isolate transients so that they can be processed independently of the rest of the audio.Ī few months back I lavished praise on Eiosis' E2 De–esser, which features both the most accurate detection of sibilants I've yet heard, and the unique ability to completely remove them from the rest of the audio path.
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