New equipment from Sound Performance Lab is
always worth checking out, as the company always
offers unique approaches to complex audio processing
with very musical results. Like SPL's Vitalizer and
Transient Designer, Kultube — the company's latest
dynamics controller — uses a few intuitive, front
panel controls to bring a tweaky, computer-based
approach to hardware-based processing.
Essentially, Kultube is a solid-state stereo
compressor/upward expander with ECC83 interstage
tubes running in Class-A that feed Burr-Brown OPA
2134 op amp output amps and optional LL1539 Lundahl
output transformers. The addition of tube stages and
the “decompression,” or upward-expansion mode,
greatly broaden this unit's usefulness from pleasing
and subtle stereo mix compression all the way to
very extreme squashing and distortion treatments of
individual tracks.
KUL UNIT
Housed in a two-rackspace, road-ready steel
cabinet, the unit is well-built with sturdy circuit
boards, toroidal power transformer, shock-mounted
tube sockets with hold-down straps, paralleled XLR
and TRS I/O connectors and a multivoltage AC power
input. A rear panel slot is provided for an optional
AD/DA converter, although my unit did not include
one. Kultube uses SPL's proprietary discrete Class-A
VCAs for gain control elements. As with the
Transient Designer, an envelope representing the
audio's instantaneous level is generated and
converted to a control voltage for the VCAs. The
front panel attack, release and ratio controls
modify this envelope for precision control over gain
reduction.
Kultube uses a single, large VU meter for all
metering. At first, I thought this was unusual for a
2-channel unit, but a lot of great stereo
compressors, like the popular SSL FX G384, use a
single meter. Kultube's meter reads either gain
reduction or output level summed in mono, as well as
input levels when the unit is in hardwired bypass.
Because Kultube's primary purpose is stereo
processing, the channels cannot be unlinked for dual
mono use; however, onboard multichannel link
facilities can slave any number of Kultube units to
a designated master for surround applications. All
slaved units' functions — except the Tube
Harmonics settings — are controlled by the
master's front panel settings, but all slave units'
signals are constantly analyzed and used to derive
consistent, overall multichannel dynamic processing
and control.
The front panel has a row of 10 illuminated
switches (meter gain reduction/level selection,
analog/digital I/O, hard/soft-knee compression
curves, compression/upward-expansion operation, PTC
(Progressive Time Control) over attack and release,
key-on/key-listen sidechain control, slave/master
linking, and a hard-wired bypass. Six knobs
(Threshold/Ratio/Attack/Release/Gain Make-up/Tube
Harmonics) should be familiar to most users, with
the exception of the last, which overdrives the tube
stage from a pristine 0% distortion to 100% filth.
All six controls have very precise, silk-screened
front panel scale markings for exact recall of
settings. I like this attention to detail and expect
it from quality professional gear.
IN THE STUDIO
I inserted the Kultube into some theme-park music
sessions I engineered for an industrial music
client. It sounded superb across the analog mix bus
of an API console. My multitrack source was a 24/48k
Pro Tools session. I used the manual attack and
release controls with soft knee, as I am leery of
presets or “automatic” compressor modes until I
am familiar with what exactly they are doing to the
sound.
I first tried the Progressive Time Control on the
attack parameter. PTC uses a special circuit that
determines the best attack time from moment to
moment, and applies an appropriate attack time from
20 microseconds up to 980 ms. With PTC Attack
depressed, the Attack control knob goes from a
manually set, fixed value into a “depth” or
intensity control for PTC's program-adapted attack
time values. Think of it as a slope control for the
compressor's attack; the compression starts just as
quickly, but goes into compression at a slower
speed. For music program, the PTC-optimized attack
times were generally slower than I might set
manually, so I had the best of both worlds: I could
adjust on top of the PTC settings for faster
attacks, with fewer undesirable side effects. After
first setting attack and release manually to my
liking, simply pushing the PTC button produced an
instantly denser sound with harder transients. This
worked beautifully for my theme-park music mixes,
which had many stops, starts and huge musical
differences, from quiet orchestral interludes to
loud rock crescendos. Manually setting a compressor
to work well under all these conditions is
problematic at the least.
The PTC release button lengthens or shortens the
compressor's release time, depending on an
instantaneous determination. PTC calculates the
average level of the music source so that music
program mixes will get longer release times while
percussive material gets shorter release times. The
release control, when PTC is activated, affects the
averaging process by including more or less signals,
more or less often, when the release is set faster
or slower. After using the unit for many sessions, I
found that PTC was the best way to get maximum
loudness with minimal negative sonic side effects.
KUL-DE-COMPRESSION
The De-Compression function works as the opposite
of compression. When the De-Comp button is pushed,
all signals above the threshold setting get louder
proportionate to the ratio setting. In the real
world, only ratios of 1:2 or lower work well, as
higher expansion ratios quickly exceed the unit's
headroom capability of +22 dBu. You'll find this out
as the make-up gain now works backward, becoming
“make-down” gain, and quickly distorts the
output if you crank it down too much.
I use the Kultube as a stereo expander on a pair
of clean-sounding, but overly squashed ambient drum
tracks. Using a ratio of 1:1.3 with a -3dB threshold
setting not only saved the record, but at the very
least, it saved me from throwing up my hands when
the producer asked if I could do anything with these
poorly recorded drum tracks we inherited.
KULTUBE HARMONICS
Those same re-animated drum tracks also benefited
from the Kultube's unique Tube Harmonics processing.
This circuit lets you overdrive the ECC83 tube stage
as much as you want without affecting the output
level or the settings of any concurrently running
compression/expansion processing. There is also no
additional noise buildup with Tube Harmonics, which
was welcome news, because adding loads of tube bloom
usually brings up more noise from another unit
patched in the chain. This could be a main reason to
buy the Kultube over another solid-state compressor.
Beyond simply using it on stereo mixes, I found the
ability to try tube distortion quickly on individual
tracks — a very creative touch that found
enthusiastic approval from producers and artists.
Retailing at $2,089, Kultube offers a unique
combination of processing in a single package. I
like the compressor for full mixes, de-compression
for drums, and Tube Harmonics for broadening and
coloring guitars, vocals and keyboards. It's a great
“go-to” box when no other processor — hardware
or plug in — will exactly do what is needed.
SPL Electronic, dist. SPL-USA
SPL-USA Sales 909 272
3465 909 272
3467 Fax
www.soundperformancelab.com.
www.SPL-USA.com
Marty@SPL-USA.com