

Of these, the one that grabs most people’s attention is being able to split the signal into multiple frequency bands and apply separate effects to each of them. If you’re a bit more adventurous, try it on a full mix, drum bus or even a reverb return.Ī few key features distinguish Saturn from other distortion plugins, namely multi-band operation, extensive modulation options, and a built-in dynamics processor.

I’ve used it on just about everything: acoustic guitars, bass, vocals, drums and percussion (especially shakers). In the more subtle modes, it’s not so much a special effect as it is a spice for mixers and producers to add flavor after tracking. Aside from the weird stuff, this plugin’s specialty is roughing up tracks in a natural-sounding, subtle way that imbues them with more texture and body. In version 1 we got tape, tube and amp types of distortion, plus a category that I can only describe as “weird”. That description, though accurate, sells this wonderful tool short because Saturn encompasses many flavors of distortion in an easy-to-use (and deep, if you want to go deep) tool. However, just in case you don’t know about Saturn, here’s the short version: it’s a distortion effect. I’m guessing most readers of this piece are already familiar with FabFilter’s Saturn, and are here just to see what’s new with version 2. Let’s see what’s new in Saturn version 2 from FabFilter. The world’s most natural-sounding distortion plugin just got a facelift and new features.
