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As the peaks are rounded off, the dynamic range is subtly reduced, making the audio feel more "glued" together.
It often introduces a gentle roll-off in the extreme highs and a slight "bloom" in the low-mids. Why Use "Soft" Saturation vs. Hard Distortion?
Applying a tiny amount of soft tube saturation to your entire mix can act as a "glue." It tames stray transients that a limiter might struggle with and adds a cohesive harmonic profile to the entire song. 2. To Tame "Digital" Vocals
Introduce , a new analog-modeled processor designed to emulate the warm, non-linear harmonics of vintage tube hardware. Unlike hard-clipping distortion, this feature provides a smooth, musical saturation that gently rounds transients and adds perceived loudness without aggressive artifacts.
It adds subtle even-order harmonics that the human ear perceives as "warmth" and "musicality."
If you apply soft tube saturation correctly, you shouldn't necessarily hear "dirt." Instead, the track should simply feel more "finished." It fills in the microscopic gaps in a digital recording, making it sound like it was recorded through a high-end vintage console or onto analog tape. Best Applications for Soft Tube Saturation 1. On the Mix Bus (Master Channel)