A 1970s-style equalizer featuring six bands and several "drive" modes to add vintage color.
If the SPX90 was the experimental artist, the REV7 was the session musician. Released in 1987, this rack unit was a studio staple for every major rock and pop producer. It offered "Acoustic" rooms, "Vocal" plates, and rich Halls that sat perfectly in a dense mix without muddying the low end.
The is a suite of professional signal-processing tools designed to replicate the sonic character of iconic 1970s analog hardware. Developed by Yamaha’s "K's Lab" and distributed by Steinberg , the collection utilizes Virtual Circuitry Modelling (VCM) technology to emulate the physical components and circuitry of classic gear rather than just their outward sound. Core Collections and Components
The suite is divided into three distinct bundles, each targeting a specific area of studio production: yamaha vintage plugin collection
The is a suite of three signal processing bundles— Vintage Channel Strip , Vintage Open Deck , and Vintage Stomp Pack —designed to bring the analog warmth of 1970s hardware to modern digital audio workstations. Originally developed as high-end "Add-on Effects" for Yamaha's digital mixing consoles, these tools were later released as VST/AU plugins via Steinberg . Core Technology: Virtual Circuitry Modeling (VCM)
The principle behind VCM is unique in the plugin landscape. Rather than simply modeling the input/output characteristics or the final "sound print" of a hardware unit, VCM analyzes and replicates the behavior of the physical electronic circuits inside the gear. This approach focuses on how individual components like transistors, capacitors, and transformers interact under voltage and load. This is the same rigorous technology Yamaha utilized in their high-end digital mixing consoles, as well as the prestigious Rupert Neve Designs Portico plugins, which are co-engineered with audio legend Rupert Neve and are known for their exceptional quality and premium price points.
Delivers the thick, warm low-end and smooth midrange characteristic of classic US consoles. A 1970s-style equalizer featuring six bands and several
Run your sampler (MPC or Ableton Drum Rack) through the SPX990 "Early Reflections" set to 8-12ms. This adds a subtle "room" that makes sampled breaks sound like they were ripped from vinyl recorded in a large studio.
Includes Swiss '70, Swiss '78, Swiss '85, and American '70.
The Ghost in the Mix
Yamaha, E1005, E1010, and SPX90 are trademarks of Yamaha Corporation. The Vintage Plugin Collection is a software emulation developed under license. All other product names and artists are trademarks of their respective owners.
The SPX90 plugin captures the grainy, 16-bit conversion that made the original sound "bad" in a beautiful way. It offers 15 effect algorithms, including Symphonic (a lush, chorused reverb), Early Reflections, and the infamous "Gate Reverb" (predating the gated drum sound popularized by Phil Collins).
Users can tweak tape speed (15 or 30 ips), tape type (old vs. new formulations), bias settings, and tape tension to manipulate the low-end head bump and high-frequency roll-off. 3. Vintage Stompboxes It offered "Acoustic" rooms, "Vocal" plates, and rich