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Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review

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Breeze2 Fereatured

Breeze 2 is a universal product for anyone who is working in any form of music/audio production. It is a stereo delay/reverb plugin with an intuitive and easy to use interface. The plugin has two channels, each with its own independent set of controls for delay and reverb. The plugin also has a global wet/dry control, which allows you to blend the affected and dry signals together.

Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review

Breeze is an industry-leading algorithmic reverb that is ultra-efficient, easy to use, and most importantly sounds wonderful. It’s also been made to be even more resilient than previous versions, making it one of the most powerful spatial tools available!

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Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review

Breeze 2.5

The Breeze 2.5 DSP incorporates an intelligently adaptive Distance-Link DSP mode, the Precedence Link inter-plugin communication system, Multi-Instance Editing, Edit Groups, Global Broadcast, and other significant changes. Because of these capabilities, Breeze 2.5 and Precedence 1.5 may be utilized as a single Spatial Mixing Environment, allowing for both an incredibly synergistic workflow as well as a genuinely next-generation sound result.

What’s New in Breeze 2.5?

  •  Distance Link DSP mode
  • Precedence Link Inter-Plugin Communication
  • Multi Instance Editing
  • Edit Groups
  • Global Broadcast
  • Selection Sync
  • Vastly less memory usage and additonal performance
  • Continued improvements of the Chameleon Color GUI system

“Breeze 2 offers ultra-dense Chambers and “Hyper-Plates”, slow-building Halls, sparse Classic modes, and special Colored modes give interesting spectral effects”, said Andrew Souter about Breeze 2. Regarding the new Hyper-Plate modes specifically, Andrew Souter, Breeze 2’s primary algorithm designer comments: “The goal was to make something that sounds great and has similar psycho-acoustic properties to real plates such an extreme density, instant density buildup, dispersion, and huge decay times for bass if desired. 2CAudio did send a review copy with no strings attached.

Breeze2 Part 2
Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review

Breeze – Installation

It is a plugin you install on your MAC or Windows workstation. Breeze is available for VST, AAX, and AU (MAC only) hosts.

Breeze – Sound

Breeze is a complete product that interests complete beginners as well as the pro mix engineers, composers, and sound designers. As for its steam, you can quickly scale Breeze 2 to more than 100 instances per project.

Breeze2 1 1
Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review

The sound produced by Breeze 2 is unquestionably stunning. It sounded massive and formed as I have rarely heard in other plugins. The modulation sound is brilliant! Breeze 2 is unmistakably significantly stronger than Breeze 1.

You should upgrade asap to benefit from the new features and performance improvements in Version 2. The effect plugin performance is over twice as fast as Breeze 1 on average.

When you use Breeze 2 with synth, the result is an entirely new synth layer – so much more than a typical reverb.

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Breeze 2 features:

  • 2CAudios  fastest, most efficient reverbs on the market
  • The renown 2CAudio sound without the CPU usage
  • Over twice as fast as Breeze 1 on average, often significantly more
  • Render entire songs in seconds
  • Scales to hundreds of simultaneous instances on modern CPUs
  • 12 Algorithm Modes (9 completely new modes)
  • Ultra-dense Chamber and Plate modes
  • Colored modes for interesting spectral effects
  • 12 Damp and EQ filter types
  • Randomization Button
  • Interactive Frequency Display
  • Completely 64-bit double-precision process end-to-end
  • Noise-floors approaching -300dB
  • 100% procedural and Resizable GUI

Breeze 2 offers 480 Total Factory Presets including:

  • 160 Current V2 Factory Presets
  • 320 Legacy V1 Factory Presets

You can expand this through a wide range of optional (purchase required) presets from 2CAudio and third-party developers:

Glacier Breeze Expansion
• Created by renown artist, composer, and sound-designer Simon Stockhausen, founder of Patchpool.net
• 200 cinematic, thematic, and huge ambient presets perfect for scoring work

Spatial Creatives Expansion
• Created by veteran sound-designer Andrew Schlesinger whose previous work includes presets for Lexicon, TC Electronics, Yamaha, Sony, Eventide, Roland, Korg, Kurzweil, Emu, Alesis, and Casio and other hardware legends
• 200 hyper-real, imagined and creative spaces for use in all forms of rock, post-rock, synth pop, and contemporary electronic music production

Simply Better Expansion
• Created by Andrew Souter, Breeze 2.0’s primary algorithm designer
• 260 presets focusing exclusively on using all of the extensive new 2.0 features to achieve results that were impossible to achieve previously with 1.0

Breeze 2 – User interface & Usability

Breeze 2 follows the Interface guidance from 2CAudio that is used on all their new plugins. The result is an effect plugin with a simple interface, easy-to-use filtering options, and a large range of presets.

The CPU performance is excellent. You should not experience any drag on a standard system. The CPU usage is way lower than most of the reverb I know and use, and I have a lot of reverb plugins in my toolbox.

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Breeze2 1024Instances Logic
1024 Instances of Breeze 2 in Logic

Rating:  Five out of five stars

Breeze 2 is an excellent second-generation reverb. I love the reverb that I can generate with this effect plugin. I sound enormous, pristine, or small – just as I need for a track of the overall mix channel.

The tool is supported by a wide range of presets that can be expanded with additional packs. I used it in a recent production where I got that unique and lush reverb I was looking for in the mix. Breeze 2 has the vibe I am looking for in a reverb plugin. All you need for a decade of reverb.

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2CAudio

2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5

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PBJ SUMMARY

PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5

PBJ SUMMARY

PBJ SUMMARY
2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5 56

The PBJ Pack is a Spatial Mixing Environment that combines sublime psychoacoustic positioning and industry-leading algorithmic reverb into a unified and intelligently adaptive workflow. It introduces a unique system of multi-instance editing and inter-plugin communication that allows potentially hundreds of linked plug-in instances to function as a unified acoustic space, where each instrument can occupy its own unique position within this cohesive virtual acoustic environment.

Precedence handles the more local and relative perceptual cues while the reverb engine handles more absolute global environmental aspects. Together they synergistically complete the spatial illusion and achieve new levels of realism. Achieving a cohesive spatial mix with individual track separation, definition, and perfect depth placement has never been this easy!

The PBJ Pack is comprised of Precedence 1.5, Breeze 2.5, and 4 Breeze Preset Expansions.

PRECEDENCE 1.5

Precedence 1.5 is a psychoacoustic stereo positioning tool. It creates an organically modulating stereo-image that produces an instantaneous sense of width, depth, and presence similar to stereo microphone techniques used in acoustic spaces. It then positions this image within a virtual stage, giving mix engineers ultra precise control over left-to-right and front-to-back placement. The end result is an incredible sense of hyper-realistic 3D space and specific localization of each instrument within this space.

PRECEDENCE 1.5
2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5 57

BREEZE 2.5

Breeze 2.5 is an industry-leading algorithmic reverb that is ultra-efficient, simple to use, and most importantly sounds absolutely sublime. In its most recent version, it has also grown to become one of the most powerful spatial tools on the market! Breeze 2.5 introduces a completely novel Distance-Link DSP mode, where the entire algorithm retunes itself based on instrument position, effectively producing a different set of impulse responses for an infinite number of positions within the virtual room.

BREEZE 2.5
2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5 58

PBJ SYSTEM

The PBJ system is a new paradigm in spatial mixing. It pairs direct sound spatialization and positioning with an adaptive multi-instance reverb environment that automatically tunes itself to augment the positional imaging established by Precedence.

The Following features form the basis of the PBJ system

PBJ SYSTEM
2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5 59
  • Link instances of Precedence and Breeze via Inter-Plugin Communication
  • Establish a unified spatial environment with Breeze, and use Precedence to place individual tracks within this environment
  • Automatically make very complex adjustments to internal Breeze DSP settings simply by changing position information in Precedence
  • Achieve never-before-heard levels of realism in-depth and azimuth positioning
  • Distance Link DSP mode adjusts automatically adjusts hundreds of internal DSP values within the Breeze Alg in response to changes to the single Distance parameter
  • PreDelay, Direct/Reflected Energy Balance and many more parameters become responsive to Distance which can be linked to Precedence
  • A single Breeze Preset no longer represents a single position within a space, but rather the entire space with an infinite variety of positions created within this space
  • Effectively an Algorithmic equivalent of having infinitely many impulse responses of a given acoustic space
MULTI INSTANCE EDITING
2CAudio Releases PBJ Spatial Mixing Environment, Precedence 1.5 & Breeze 2.5 60
  • Manage many instances of Precedence and Breeze within a single GUI window
  • Use the Precedence Position Display to visualize position information for all tracks in an Edit Group simultaneously.
  • Edit parameter and preset data for any instance within and Edit Group
  • Multi-Instance Edits performed in Precedence change linked Breeze Instances as well
  • Speed up your workflow and eliminate the need to open and close GUI windows one at a time

EDIT GROUPS

  • Organize and Group many instances of Breeze into edit Groups to manage complex sessions
  • Allow some instances to work independently without Groups if desired, for send buses

GLOBAL BROADCAST

  • Make macro changes en mass to an entire group of 10s or 100s of instances!
  • Apply preset and parameter changes to all instances within an Edit Group!
  • Change the spatial mixing environment for an entire mix in a single click while maintaining relative track positions
  • Change the existing positioning laws in Precedence en masse to adjust spatial contrast in established mixes
  • Allow individual variations for each track to enable micro-management of individual track details when needed
  • Allow Randomize to create randomized preset variations for an entire group that remain part of the unified space

SELECTION SYNC

Lock multi-instance selections to Precedence to allow Precedence to function as the command center for Multi-Instance mixing

ADDITIONAL NEW FEATURES

  • 3 Algorithm Modes in Precedence:

    Beta: the default mode providing the most specific positioning using a full set of psychoacoustic principals
    Mu: an enhanced mono-compatibility mode for cases where this is a critical concern
    Omega: an enhanced diffusive model with extra widening designed for synths and modern FX​
  • Precedence X-Range Loss Mode: allowing more extreme Gain and High-Frequency Loss to exaggerate the sense of distance for use in Post Production SFX
  • Precedence Input Channel Swap to more easily align sample libraries that have been recorded In-Situ with the final desired position
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Virtual Instrument Library

Creating Depths with BREEZE2

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Breeze2 1

Creating Depths with BREEZE2

Creating “acoustic depths” is especially needed for natural-sounding mixes of orchestras.

orchestra setups6
Orchestra Setups

You may want to place your instruments, as you can see in the picture above. Set Left and Right with the balance knob. But how does one “push” an instrument back or forward?

Breeze2 Fereatured

This can be done by using a reverb plug-in.
“Yes, I know”, you say, “but I do not want more reverb, just push the instrument back, it never works for me.”

Breeze2 Part 2

Here’s a guide on how to do it with BREEZE2:

If you like, download some Orchestra Audio Tracks from here. Willem Defesch “Sonata” could be good for this experiment. Insert all the Audio-File Solo Violin into your DAW and insert BREEZE2 (See also our Breeze 2 by 2CAudio Review) into the effect section.

breeze2 video a
BREEZE2

Select the preset: F1 Factory Current / The Med Hall B
Change the following:
Pre Delay = 0ms
Time = 1.0 – 1.2
Now you can push your instrument backwards and forwards with Dry / Wet.

By the way: You get a 3D effect when you press “MIX”“. Then the word MIX changes to BALANCE.

Now you can use the Width controller to adjust the 3D effect. “66% width” is probably enough.

BREEZE2 Den Med Hall B
BREEZE2

Of course, the “Den Med Hall B” preset is not optimal for our recorder. It sounds too big in the distance because it was taken close. For a more natural reverb sound, you have to dampen the low frequencies a bit. I chose the bandpass in Breeze2 (blue curve).

Remember the following:
Instruments that sound far away can not be far left or right. So the farther away instruments are the more they sound from the middle.
Also: The used preset is only to be understood as starting point. The goal is to have as many early reflections as possible. = nice depths.

How does it sound?

The distance depends on the ratio “dry/wet”
This is how BREEZE 2 sounds with the modified “Den-Med-Hall-B” preset:

This is how BREEZE 2 sounds with the additional adapted bandpass EQ:

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And the final mix…There are only 4 audio tracks in the Willem De Fesch Sonata:

  • 1 recorder
  • 2 organ high
  • 3 organ low
  • 4 cello
    I summarized the organ in a group track.
Breeze2 And the final mix… defesh projekt2018
And the final mix…

This is the “virtual stage” I tried to achieve with the mix.

BREEZE2 virtual stage
virtual stage


The organ at the back, far away, the cello back, because it actually belongs to the basso continuo (organ) and then the flute prominently in front of me the listener.
This makes sense because actually, the fetus is a lly instrument, which may be quiet something close to the listener.
Of course, everything is over the top, but BREEZE 2 does a pretty good job.

Audio-Examples:

Without any effect 

With BREEZE 2

Using all this for an Orchestra… I tried to recreate this virtual stage acoustically

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BTW, you can download these Orchestra-Audio-Tracks and try yourself.
See at Work – Files

About the Author Beat Kaufmann:

Beat learned the profession of electronics. His hobby has always been the music. Although he had first learned violin, he was fascinated by the newly released synthesizers in the 70s. In 1975 he bought his first synthesizer and tried to imitate Wendy Carlos, Isao Tomita and so on. So he went through all the techniques from CV via Midi to the first DAWs over the years.

At the appearance of the first professional samples Kaufmann was present as well. He was demo producer for «Vienna Symphony Library» for more than 10 years. Also since 2004 he is the owner of a professional recording studio. www.musik-produktion-createc.ch

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Plugin

2CAudio Breeze 2.1 Update

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Precedence by 2CAudio and Breeze 2.1

Breeze 2.1 offers some very significant improvements including P-Link Mode, Chameleon Color GUI System, Sub-Zero Suspend-On-Silence CPU-Saver, 3 New Filter Types for Damp and EQ, and more. Breeze 2.1 update connects with the new Precedence spatialization, and positioning plugin see our Precedence review here. See our Breeze 2 Review here if you want to learn more about the effect plugin.

Breeze2 UI

Breeze 2.1 New Features & Changes:

  • P-Link Mode
  • Chameleon Color GUI
  • Suspend Processing On Zero Input
  • 3 New Filter Types
  • Improvement to Early Phase Response
  • Phase Inversion Button
  • Channel Swap Button
  • Other Misc Tweaks
  • New Presets

Below you find the description direct from 2CAudio on some of the new changes.

P-Link Mode

When Using P-Link Mode Pre-Delay is set automatically as a function of Mix/Balance, Size, and the current Algorithm Mode. Additional behind-the-scenes, secret-sauce changes are made as well, so that the Mix/Balance control can effectively be thought of a “Distance Control”.

In real acoustic environments, sounds that are closer to the listener are likely to have MORE pre-delay, and LESS reverb energy relative to the source sound energy. Therefore there should be an inverse relationship between Mix and Pre-Delay in most cases to agree with behavior in the real world, but that is not widely understood in the community, so we can now set this up appropriately for you automatically. In this mode, the standard Pre-Delay control is replaced with the “PD Adjust” control which allows some manual adjustment of our automatic guideline suggestion.

The mode Mix/Balance should be considered “Distance”. Designed to work correctly with Precedence. The idea is merely to set a Distance value in Precedence and then manually enter the same numerical value into the Mix parameter in the Breeze instance that follows it. Precedence supplies about half of the actual distance illusion, and Breeze 2 provides the other half.

Precedence by 2CAudio and Breeze 2.1
Precedence by 2CAudio and Breeze 2.1

Together they create an incredible sense of depth and allow you place instruments anywhere within the space that Breeze 2 creates: left to right, as well as front-to-back. The Precedence algorithm has been designed with this in mind. Both can be used independently of course, but true magic happens when used together.

We are attempting to establish communication between Precedence and Breeze 2 instances so that by merely changing position in Precedence, Breeze settings will be updated appropriately as well. The integration will take a little extra time and come in another free update later this year hopefully before the holiday season. At the moment, just manually set Breeze Mix to the same value as Precedence Distance. This will be available in future versions of B2 and Aether as well in one form or another as they become available. Precedence is an essential member of the family, and the link between it and our reverbs is compelling.

Chameleon Color GUI

The same color system available in Precedence is available in Breeze 2. All 150 factory supplied color preferences are also available. You can make a vast variety of custom GUI themes now, to suit your style and vibe!

Suspend Processing On Zero Input

Ultra low CPU usage is great, but there is one thing even better: zero CPU usage! Beginning with Precedence and Breeze 2.1, we have now introduced an intelligent suspend-on-silence feature in our products.

If the plug-ins are not receiving any input signal, they will automatically disable processing, and enter an approximately zero CPU usage state! For 2CAudio it is massive news for composers who use massive scoring templates and like to auto-load hundreds of instances. Maximum CPU usage will only be reached in such cases when all tracks in the project are active at the same time, which almost never happens in large sessions.

Sparse arrangements can save orders of magnitude in CPU-resources, which in turn leads to more creative freedom and fewer annoyances such as heat and fan noise generated by powerful computers in the studio. Furthermore, if playback is stopped for a coffee break, lunch break, or overnight, processing is automatically suspended, potentially saving you significant money on your electric bill. In other words, we automatically turn the lights off for you, helping to save the planet in the process. We think that is pretty cool.

In Breeze 2.1 some Alg Modes do not reach precisely zero CPU at the moment, as we achieve in Precedence, but we can turn off the most intensive part of the algorithm. And about half of them reach almost precisely zero. Note that we must wait longer to turn compelling off given that reverb adds decay and we don’t want to chop off the tails. How long we expect is a function of the current reverb time and other things.

New Filter Types

Some cool new filters for EQ and Damp: Tilt II Dual Shelf Bell See the 2.1 example presets.

Phase Inversion Button

In Breeze 2.0, our novel spatialization of the dry signal could sometimes result in the signal being more out of phase than in phase: i.e., having a negative correlation. It is a “super stereo” effect, which can be quite cool in some contexts such as use on synths etc., but it can also confuse instrument position within large mixes.

Thus we have taken a closer look at that, and have prevented it from happening by chance statistically speaking. All presets should now remain more in-phase, than out-of-phase, at least for wide frequency ranges. If you have an instrument that is playing a melody in a very narrow frequency range, such as a say a static sine wave, phase inversion is still possible in close frequency ranges, but a whole string section for example or even the performance of a single violin over the course of its performance will stay in phase on average.

It helps localization be more defined and specific which also helps Precedence work its magic. Some potential users mentioned they loved the sound of Breeze 2 in solo but occasionally found it challenging to out-of-phase into large mixes. The 2CAudio was likely the reason, and this topic should be much improved and is also essential for Precedence interaction.

If you wish to abuse anti-phase, super-stereo effects intentionally for special effects and synths etc, we now have a phase invert button that will allow you to do that. You can also use it to correct any problematic narrow-range instrument that manages to escape our statistical process. This button is similar to what has already been in B2.

Channel Swap Button

Channel Swap, reverses the input channels, making Right Feed Left and vice versa. That can create slap-delay type effects in the opposite channels when applied to signals that have been hard-panned or “hard positioned” (i.e. 90 degrees) via Precedence.

It confuses localization to some extent, and should probably be avoided in large orchestral mixes, but it can be nice in smaller contemporary projects. It can be nice with the Hyper-Plate by merely for example. The button is also similar to what has already been in B2.

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