Part of the problem is that the rest of Vintage Warmer’s controls aren’t quite so intuitive. The plugin’s intentions are made clear by the fact that the Drive knob is larger than all the rest the harder you crank it, the more the signal will saturate and distort. Vintage Warmer does things a bit differently to most compressors, and that’s largely because it treats compression as just one element of a bigger picture along with saturation and tonal colouration, falling somewhere in between the effect of a conventional compressor/limiter (either single or multi-band) and a tape saturation effect. Widely hailed as one of the best of the first generation of plugins, Vintage Warmer then suffered from overuse and became a bit of cliche, but it’s still a highly useable tool. First released in 2001, PSP’s iconic analogue-style compressor plugin has gone in and out of fashion over the years. Vintage Warmer probably isn’t the right plugin for those occasions. There’s a time and a place for clean and subtle compression. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 PSP Vintage Warmer 2
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