SoundToys Launches Radiator — Altec 1567A Tube Mixer Emulation

Simplicity can be the pathway to serious creativity.

SoundToys is helping producers, mixers, and engineers to experience that happy magic for themselves with the launch of its new Radiator software plug-in, which is a tube input channel with EQ based on the classic Altec 1567A tube mixer from the 1960s.

The heat is on to sound even better: Radiator arrives.

The Radiator is available now for $129. Radiator also includes Little Radiator, a simpler single-stage tube pre-amp  model based on the Altec 1566A hardware, which was the “little brother” of the Altec 1567A (and reviewed here by SonicScoop’s Justin Colletti). Little Radiator was originally offered for free as a promotion earlier this year — users who currently have the free version of Little Radiator can upgrade to the full Radiator plug-in package for $49 for a limited time, ending January 3 (regularly its $89). A free 30-day trial version is available.

Read on for more details from SoundToys, about the latest creation to emanate from the workshop of founder Ken Bogdanowicz.

“Radiator brings that classic Altec sound to desktop recording rigs, capturing the distinctive warmth and punch of the original hardware. Featuring the modeled bass and treble tone controls from the original unit, a mix control for easy parallel processing, and the saturation and harmonic effects of the original hardware’s input and output amplifiers. All of these different circuit elements interact, allowing a wide range of tones to be created with just a few simple knobs.

The original Altec 1567A hardware was a rack-mounted five-input tube mixer with removable transformers, a simple two-knob EQ, an unmistakable green faceplate, and a whopping 97 dB of gain. The sound, by today’s standards, is colored and gritty, with a heaping helping of noise thrown in for good measure. In its day, it was used on several early Motown hits, and found its way into the PA racks of countless churches and school auditoriums across the USA.

More recently, the Altec mixers were picked up by recording studios as an inexpensive way to bring analog color and character to computer based digital recording. It was only a matter of time before hits were being made – first producers like Matt Wallace of early Maroon 5 fame and now bands like the Black Keys, who had a custom console made from Altec 1567A’s, have driven up the demand, and price, for these funky little color boxes.

sponsored


Computer recordists everywhere can now get the Altec tube sound – on every input channel, without the hassles of interfacing to esoteric analog gear, and at a much lower cost.

’These green tube mixers are one of our favorite pieces around the studio, and I loved having it in my rack,’ says Ken Bogdanowicz of SoundToys,  ‘But I like it even better when it’s on every channel of my Pro Tools rig. Plus, now I get to fill those three rack spaces with another fun analog toy.’”

Please note: When you buy products through links on this page, we may earn an affiliate commission.

sponsored