Waves Audio announces new Curves plugins, which it claims can do your EQ for you

Bluebox

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Waves Audio has announced a new trio of plugins, the Curves Spectral Series, which it claims will help do your EQ for you.

The first plugin in the trilogy, the Curves Equator, focuses on resonance suppression and will be available this month. The next two plugins will arrive next year and are set to focus on traditional audio equalisation and EQ matching respectively.

In a new video hosted by Product Manager Shai Fishman, he claims: “You may never EQ again… if we succeed.”

“We know you know how to EQ,” Fishman continues. “If you think about EQ technology, it hasn’t really advanced in the last 30 years. We thought there had to be a better way to get rid of Q’s and frequencies and nodes and all that stuff that’s really tedious and technical about EQ. Why not have the technology do the work for you? Go where you want to go, without worrying about the technical aspects?”

Fishman later explains how the Curves plugins together can effectively “do the EQ for you” with artificial intelligence. “It listens to your content,” he says. “Each plugin in the Curves series can learn your audio. Equator stabilises and protects it from anomalies. The next plugin will be able to EQ for you and even provide you with a few options, and the last plugin will be able to match any target you give it. It’s going to minimise errors, it’s going to actually do the work for you with a very intuitive GUI that allows you to control a lot of technology with very simple and basic functions.”

In June, Waves was one of 50 companies to sign a set of guidelines called Principles for Music Creation with AI, which advocated for the responsible use of AI in music creation. The guidelines seek to protect the rights of musicians as generative AI technology develops, while also acknowledging that AI can be an empowering tool if used correctly.
Waves says the Curves Equator, the first plugin in the Curves Spectral Series – will arrive September 2024. And as we’re nearing the end of the month, we’re betting the release is imminent.
 
Waves Audio has announced a new trio of plugins, the Curves Spectral Series, which it claims will help do your EQ for you.

The first plugin in the trilogy, the Curves Equator, focuses on resonance suppression and will be available this month. The next two plugins will arrive next year and are set to focus on traditional audio equalisation and EQ matching respectively.

In a new video hosted by Product Manager Shai Fishman, he claims: “You may never EQ again… if we succeed.”

“We know you know how to EQ,” Fishman continues. “If you think about EQ technology, it hasn’t really advanced in the last 30 years. We thought there had to be a better way to get rid of Q’s and frequencies and nodes and all that stuff that’s really tedious and technical about EQ. Why not have the technology do the work for you? Go where you want to go, without worrying about the technical aspects?”

Fishman later explains how the Curves plugins together can effectively “do the EQ for you” with artificial intelligence. “It listens to your content,” he says. “Each plugin in the Curves series can learn your audio. Equator stabilises and protects it from anomalies. The next plugin will be able to EQ for you and even provide you with a few options, and the last plugin will be able to match any target you give it. It’s going to minimise errors, it’s going to actually do the work for you with a very intuitive GUI that allows you to control a lot of technology with very simple and basic functions.”

In June, Waves was one of 50 companies to sign a set of guidelines called Principles for Music Creation with AI, which advocated for the responsible use of AI in music creation. The guidelines seek to protect the rights of musicians as generative AI technology develops, while also acknowledging that AI can be an empowering tool if used correctly.
Waves says the Curves Equator, the first plugin in the Curves Spectral Series – will arrive September 2024. And as we’re nearing the end of the month, we’re betting the release is imminent.
This type of technology will soon have all engineers fired
 

Bluebox

Member
Battle Points: 3
But now a EQ can do the work for us, that leaves time to do other things. Something like fixing chords or programming drum fills. This stuff is sick. First EQ, then compression, then maybe it may even make the track for you. However with all this power would come great responsibility as a music producer I think this kind of thing is the beginning of something big. I would use this to do beef up drums to see the signals you cant hear on headphones and speakers. And maybe it can clear muddy reverby tracks without the hassle. The possibilities are endless.
Season 2 Nbc GIF by Manifest
 
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