![]() ![]() ![]() In the video I show Claro in action, firstly on a solo piano recording and then demonstrating the Mix page on a multitrack session. The way this works is by specifying a reference track and then a detailed comparison can be made of that track against the reference track by selecting it. The energy display from the centre of the Produce tab, which shows the energy of the signal across the audio spectrum in a horizontal bar, is represented for every instance of Claro and potentially problematic build-ups of energy at specific frequencies are identified as yellow bars. Then there is a third tab - ‘Mix’, which presents every instance of Claro in a session to be viewed together in the same window. ![]() However at any point the user can take those intuitive settings from what Sonnox have called the ‘Produce’ tab and open them in ‘Tweak’, where a more conventional, fully-featured modern EQ plugin allows any necessary adjustments to the first pass to be made. A simple interface with 3 bands of EQ with descriptive language and visual representation of the audio given priority over numbers like frequency and Q values. The clever thing about Claro is how it presents itself. ![]()
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