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Description

Step into the world of sonic chaos with the SoundToys Devil-Loc, a distortion plugin that transforms your tracks with a blend of grit and character. Inspired by the quirky charm of vintage mic levelers, this plugin captures the essence of analog unpredictability. Devil-Loc doesn't just add distortion—it redefines it, bringing a unique blend of compression and saturation that breathes life into otherwise flat loops and drum tracks.

Whether you're looking to inflate room ambience or conjure extreme gating effects, Devil-Loc delivers with flair. Push it to its limits and witness loud hits crush into silence, only to bloom into a wild, fuzzy crescendo. Yet, the true magic happens when you dial it back to discover those sweet spots that add a warm, vintage halo to your sound.

Perfect for producers who love to experiment, the Devil-Loc is your ticket to unleashing creative mayhem. Its intuitive interface makes it easy to dial in the perfect amount of chaos, while the switchable release times and tone controls let you shape the distortion to suit your needs. From thundering drums to driven lo-fi loops, Devil-Loc is a versatile tool that fits seamlessly into any production setup. Compatible with major DAWs, this plugin invites you to explore the boundaries of sound design.

Key Features:

  • Vintage-inspired distortion and compression effects
  • Intuitive controls for mixing original and processed sounds
  • Switchable release times for dynamic control
  • Compatible with popular DAWs like Pro Tools, Logic Pro, and Cubase
  • Ideal for drums, loops, and mix bus applications

Product specs

Software Type Extreme Compression effects
Platform Mac, PC
Upgrade/Full Full
Download/Boxed Download
Bit Depth 32-bit, 64-bit
Format AAX Native, VST, AU, AudioSuite
Authorization Type iLok Account required
Hardware Requirements - Mac Intel processor
Hardware Requirements - PC Intel compatible processor
OS Requirements - Mac OS X 10.10 or later
OS Requirements - PC Windows 7 SP1 or later

FAQs

What is the SoundToys Devil-Loc plugin primarily used for?

The SoundToys Devil-Loc is used for adding extreme compression and distortion, especially effective on drums, to create huge, gritty, and aggressive sounds.

Is the SoundToys Devil-Loc compatible with my DAW?

The SoundToys Devil-Loc is compatible with most major DAWs as it supports AAX Native, VST, AU, and AudioSuite formats.

What are the system requirements for using SoundToys Devil-Loc on a Mac?

To use SoundToys Devil-Loc on a Mac, you need an Intel processor and OS X 10.10 or later.

Does the SoundToys Devil-Loc require any special authorization?

Yes, the SoundToys Devil-Loc requires an iLok account for authorization.

Can SoundToys Devil-Loc be used on both 32-bit and 64-bit systems?

Yes, SoundToys Devil-Loc supports both 32-bit and 64-bit systems.

soundtoys

soundtoys

Soundtoys Devil-Loc: Little Tip

Video thumbnail for Soundtoys Devil-Loc: Little Tip by soundtoys

Soundtoys Devil-Loc: Little Tip

soundtoys

soundtoys

Video thumbnail for Nick Launay: My 5 Must-Have Plug Ins by Produce Like A Pro

Nick Launay: My 5 Must-Have Plug Ins

Produce Like A Pro

Produce Like A Pro

Video thumbnail for No Bulls#*t plugin review tutorial - Devil Loc by Soundtoys by XNB

No Bulls#*t plugin review tutorial - Devil Loc by Soundtoys

XNB

XNB

Video thumbnail for Andrew Scheps Devil-Loc Snare | Parallel Processing for Huge Snares by Green Light Sound

Andrew Scheps Devil-Loc Snare | Parallel Processing for Huge Snares

Green Light Sound

Green Light Sound

Video thumbnail for Complete Devil-Loc Plugin Soundtoys Tutorial: What Makes it Great? by Next Level Sound

Complete Devil-Loc Plugin Soundtoys Tutorial: What Makes it Great?

Next Level Sound

Next Level Sound

Video thumbnail for Soundtoys Devil Loc: master the saturation on your vocals (Tutorial) I Plugins Masters by Plugins Masters

Soundtoys Devil Loc: master the saturation on your vocals (Tutorial) I Plugins Masters

Plugins Masters

Plugins Masters

Reviews

PROS

  • Excellent for adding punch and girth to drum tracks

  • Versatile for various instruments: drums, bass, guitar, vocals, piano, and synth

  • Mix and darkness controls enhance usability and creativity

  • Perfect for achieving Tame Impala and Ben Frost-style crunchy drums

  • Inflates room ambience, adding excitement to rhythm tracks

  • Capable of creating extreme gating effects at higher settings

  • Simple yet effective tool for enhancing mix bus

  • Offers a unique blend of distortion and compression in one plugin

  • Easy to use with noticeable effects even at low settings

CONS

  • Lacks output gain control, leading to volume spikes

  • Limited range despite additional controls

Owner Insights

We analyzed real musician discussions from forums and Reddit to find what players love, question, and tweak about SoundToys Devil-Loc.

Use cases and applications

  • Devil-Loc is particularly effective when used on the side snare mic rather than the entire drum kit to avoid heavy-handedness.

    Source
  • Users achieve a Tame Impala-style sound by sending individual drum mics to a bus and applying Devil-Loc in parallel for a controlled effect.

    Source
  • Devil-Loc's effect is often too intense for cymbals; it's recommended to exclude them and focus on shells like kick, snare, and toms.

    Source
  • Devil-Loc is notably effective for parallel compression, especially when seeking an extreme smashing effect on specific tracks.

    Source

Features and functionality

  • The Devil-Loc Deluxe version includes a mix knob that allows users to blend the effect subtly by dialing in the desired amount of wet signal.

    Source
  • Devil-Loc's compression curves are among the most aggressive in plugins, creating a uniquely gritty and harsh saturation effect not found in many other plugins.

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User experience

  • Owners note that Devil-Loc amplifies imperfections, so starting with high-quality recordings is crucial to avoid magnifying unwanted elements.

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  • Users often find Decapitator more versatile than Devil-Loc, which tends to be limited due to its aggressive nature.

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Comparisons

  • Decapitator offers analog-type saturation with options for subtle to destructive tones, while Devil-Loc is more of a one-trick pony with its intense compression.

    Source
  • Some users find Tone Empire's Locness V2 to offer a preferable aggressive drum processing experience over Devil-Loc, especially valued for its current price of $25.

    Source
  • Slate Digital Heatwaves is noted as a viable free alternative for similar aggressive processing, though not a direct substitute for Devil-Loc's unique characteristics.

    Source

Value and pricing

  • Soundtoys often provides substantial discounts during sales, with past users noting significant savings on bundles during Black Friday or academic promotions.

    Source
Add

4.5 out of 5

Based on 3 Reviews and 8 Ratings

5 star
4 star
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the_last_factory

Smash and crush

I don't want to blow my speakers by clipping my gear all the time. The Devil-Loc as well as the Decapitator help me achieve that sound. I love the crunchy drums on Tame Impala records and on Ben Frost albums, but since I can't find a Level-Loc available and I'm very selective about what I buy, the Devil-Loc is a great alternative and is a near-perfect emulation.

chirurgicalswaveforms

Great VST , Must Have

Simple, devious and often unpredictable, Devil-Loc is a little plug-in that makes drums sound big. Drop it on a drum kit or loop and listen to Devil-Loc inflate the room ambience, pumping excitement into an otherwise drab rhythm track. Push it to its limits to create extreme gating effects where loud hits crush the signal to silence and the output blooms into a fuzzy mess.

Now back off the controls. You’ll find some amazing sweet spots where Devil-Loc shows its angelic side, adding a vintage halo to loops and drums. You can even try it on your mix bus—if you dare!

S

no output gain

Got this one for free... Cool effect but it has no output gain so the harder you use it, the louder it gets.

Artist usage

Add artist
See how Offset uses SoundToys Devil-Loc

Offset

Rapper

Migos

...
Verified via Soundonsound

Used for Quavo and Offest's features on Beyoncé and Jay-Z's "Apeshit", as stated by producer Stuart White in this September 2018 Sound on Sound interview.

The first four aux tracks feature SoundToys effects, namely Little Microshift, two EchoBoy delays, and a delay from the Little PrimalTap. Next are a Hall Reverb aux and a Church Reverb aux, both using Waves’ RVerb, an EMT plate from Audio Ease’s Altiverb, four aux tracks with the Waves H-Delay and various other plug-ins on them as well, and four more reverb auxes with the Avid Revibe II, two Avid D-Verbs and another RVerb.

White: “I use the Little Microshift in pretty much every mix, with the left-right micro pitch-shift effect that’s similar to the classic effect in the Eventide H3000 shift where you pitch one side down six cents and one side up six cents to create width. It’s a good way to get your vocals wider without them being out of phase. It thickens up vocals, and is kind of like a doubler. I do quite a lot of filtering on some of the EchoBoy delays, for example with the Waves REQ, and I am adding colour with the SoundToys Devil-Loc, which is great if you want to colour the delay so it is separate from the main vocal, and compress it with the UAD LA3A and mix that in to taste.”

(...) “The Migos vocals came in as seven audio tracks, with the Avid D-Verb on each of them. Putting a D-Verb on a track before EQ is not something I normally do, but it sounded great. So I adjusted them a bit, but otherwise left them as they were. The tracks also came in with the Aux track above, and the EQ3, with a high pass at 60Hz and notches at 430Hz and 1.41kHz and a high boost, the Waves API 2500 compressor, the RComp, the Waves Q10 EQ, following a slightly similar curve to the EQ3, the Waves De-esser, the Waves Aphex Aural Exciter, and the Avid Dyn3 expander/gate. I added the EQ3, with another high-pass filter at 144Hz, and the RComp, with a ratio of 10:1.”

See how Burna Boy uses SoundToys Devil-Loc

Burna Boy

Singer

...
Verified via Soundonsound

Used for lead vocals on "Time Flies", as stated by mix engineer Jesse Ray Ernster in this June 2021 Sound on Sound interview.

“The song already felt great after a few minutes of mixing,” Ernster continues. “The reference mix felt good, the beat was solid too. As I mentioned earlier, after that it was a matter of getting the vocals to shine. Dialling in the vocals took quite a bit of time on this song, because there were so many of them. This song was all about the backing vocals, getting them to sit in a place where they can shine and sparkle and just sit perfectly.

“Pretty much every background vocal on the song has the CLA Mix Hub channel strip, doing some high‑pass filtering, some EQ, and compression. I approached this mix a bit like a console mix, and dialling in every background vocal with the Mix Hub got them where I wanted them to be. I did not need 10 plug‑ins to make the background vocals sound good. This plug‑in just lit them up.

“One interesting moment with the backing vocals is in the bridge of the song. Diddy had a vision that these ‘welelel’ vocals would not only be wide but would also be wrapping around, with the panning going from left to right. So I put on the Waves S1 Shuffler, turned up the width knob and then automated the panning. It was a bold Diddy move that really paid off. It became a special moment, and is one of my favourite spots in the song.

“Underneath the ‘welelel’ track are nine backing vocal aux effect tracks, which are a ModDelay 3; 16th‑note, eighth‑note, quarter‑note and half‑note delays (all the Valhalla Delay); a ping‑pong delay (Waves H‑Delay); and all those tracks have sends to a Valhalla Vintage Verb plate and the FabFilfter Pro‑R. And all those feed the BGV FX bus. I was just moving these effects all around until they felt right.

“Burna’s main lead vocal is in red. One technique I learned from my dad is to ride the fader on vocals, so you don’t get the anomalies that you can get when compression is applied to a recorded voice. As I don’t have a fader, I chopped up the vocal and then adjusted the Clip Gain for each phrase. As for processing, I added the Gullfoss EQ, that kind of rides the frequencies, and which I love. I used it on Burna’s voice on most of the album. There’s also a Pro‑Q 3 to notch out some frequencies, and the Acustica Amber 3 EQ, which adds the most gorgeous top end.

“There’s a send on the main lead vocal to an aux with the Soundtoys Devil‑Loc, adding parallel distortion. It’s a bus I try once in a while. If the vocal is sitting where I want it to sit in the mix volume‑wise, but it needs a little bit more glue, body and warmth, I’ll go for the Devil‑Loc. It brings the vocal straight up into your face. If you want a pop vocal that is right on top of everything, this is it.

“I also have other vocal aux effect tracks, ie. different delays, reverbs, pitch‑shifts. I generally do not use reverbs on the lead vocal, but only delays, because they take up less space. Then I’ll have a delay to feed a reverb that can sit in the background. The pre‑delay creates this ocean of ambience that does not take away from the intimacy and upfront nature of the lead vocal.

“There are a couple of tracks called ‘Throw’, and I create those by dragging duplicate audio to a separate track, and then putting an effect on with the mix at 100 percent, in this case Valhalla Delays. I don’t really like using automation on sends and muting and so on, as it’s a really slow workflow. It takes one second to drag down some audio, add a delay and done.

“Below the ‘Throw’ tracks are two Time Adjuster aux tracks and a Valhalla Space Modulator aux track. Together they recreate the Eventide H3000 wide vocal effect. The Time Adjuster plug‑in delays the left and right channels a bit, and one channel has the CLA MixHub to add some distortion and the other channel has the lo‑fi. The Valhalla Space Modulator is followed by a Cranesong Phoenix II, driving really hard in Dark Essence mode. These three go to an aux called ‘SHIFT M’, and it turns a mono vocal into a wide, enveloping, beautiful vocal. Also, there’s a ‘Lead Vocal All FX’ aux with the Pro‑Q 3 EQ that takes out all top and bottom, which you don’t need on vocal effects.”

See how Stephen Hindman uses SoundToys Devil-Loc

Stephen Hindman

Composer, Music Producer

The Golden Filter

...
Verified via https://www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/

'When we need to overdrive something, Devil Loc is generally the right plug-in.'

See how Mark “Spike” Stent uses SoundToys Devil-Loc

Mark “Spike” Stent

Music Producer, Audio Engineer

...
Verified via AudioTechnology

In an interview with AudioTechnology, music producer and audio engineer Mark “Spike” Stent confirmed using the SoundToys Devil-Loc.

Album Usage

The SoundToys Devil-Loc has been featured on the following albums:

Used With

Based on how musicians on Equipboard use SoundToys Devil-Loc, it is most commonly used with the following gear.

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