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Description
Step into a world of lush, immersive soundscapes with the Valhalla VintageVerb, a staple in the toolbox of both budding musicians and seasoned producers. This reverb plugin draws inspiration from the classic digital reverbs of the 1970s and 1980s, offering a versatile range of 18 reverb algorithms that deliver everything from subtle ambiances to expansive, cathedral-like spaces. Whether you're looking to add warmth to a vocal track or create a massive, enveloping atmosphere for your latest ambient piece, VintageVerb has you covered.
Designed for ease of use without sacrificing depth, its interface is intuitive, allowing users to dial in the perfect reverb settings quickly. The plugin supports a wide range of DAWs, making it an ideal addition to any digital setup. With its unique blend of vintage character and modern performance, Valhalla VintageVerb remains a favorite among producers who demand both quality and flexibility in their sonic tools.
Key Features:
- 18 reverb algorithms inspired by vintage digital reverbs
- Intuitive, easy-to-navigate user interface
- Compatible with major DAWs (Digital Audio Workstations)
- Ideal for a variety of applications, from vocals to cinematic soundscapes
- Highly customizable with controls for pre-delay, decay, and more
Product specs
| Plugin Format | AU, VST |
| Operating Systems | Mac, Windows |
Videos
Geoff Manchester
Valhalla VintageVerb: Why is everyone in love with this thing??
Reviews
PROS
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Exceptional vintage sound, perfect for 80s-inspired music
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Transforms dry sounds into massive, smooth textures
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Versatile presets for various reverb styles
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Minimalistic, user-friendly interface
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Outstanding value at just $50
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Low CPU usage, ideal for complex projects
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Distinct algorithms with unique reverb characteristics
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Perfect for both beginners and seasoned professionals
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Adds depth and magic to any audio project
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Consistently high-quality sound across different instruments
CONS
Owner Insights
We analyzed real musician discussions from forums and Reddit to find what players love, question, and tweak about Valhalla VintageVerb.
Comparisons
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Valhalla VintageVerb is preferred over convolution reverbs for a more dynamic, modulated sound compared to the static nature of convolution reverbs.
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Valhalla VintageVerb is favored for its versatility, often requiring less tweaking than Valhalla Room to achieve desired sounds.
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Compared to Valhalla Room, VintageVerb is favored for its richer sound quality, especially in contexts where reverb needs to be a prominent effect.
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Valhalla VintageVerb offers subtle algorithmic variations, contrasting Xenoverb's drastically different reverb types.
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Users equate Valhalla's sound quality to Lexicon algorithms, with some noting Valhalla's more creative options despite not reaching Lexicon's quality.
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Features and functionality
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Valhalla VintageVerb emulates vintage hardware, providing lush 70s and 80s reverb styles, contrasting with Room’s focus on realistic room emulation.
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The plugin includes a "1970s" setting that down-samples the input for a distinct texture not typically found in other reverb plugins.
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Valhalla VintageVerb features a unique "attack" parameter allowing users to control response time beyond standard pre-delay, offering tailored reverb shaping.
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User experience
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Some users find Valhalla Room to sound more artificial, suiting electronic music or more produced tracks.
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Users appreciate the minimal, effective controls that avoid overwhelming options, allowing for straightforward sound shaping without unnecessary complexity.
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Some users find Valhalla VintageVerb overly dense, potentially complicating its integration into mixes.
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Use cases and applications
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VintageVerb is commonly utilized on vocals with presets like "Drum Ambience" recommended for vocal effects.
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VintageVerb is particularly effective for hall and plate reverbs, excelling in adding depth and creativity to sound design.
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VintageVerb is particularly praised for enhancing percussion and synths, adding a perceived "soul" to the mix that some users feel was missing without it.
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Valhalla VintageVerb's default preset is frequently used as a "fire and forget" reverb in project templates.
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Value and pricing
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Valhalla plugins maintain a consistent price of $50 and are considered a good value given their quality and versatility.
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Critic Reviews
5.0 out of 5
Based on 21 Reviews and 129 Ratings
175
One of the best reverb plugins for a very affordable price.
I had previously been using different free reverb plugins to make 80s inspired music but a lot of them sounded too clean and modern. After buying vintage verb I fell in love with the sound of it. It makes even a really dry analog synth sound massive and smooth, It pushes it out into the stereo field. It works great on snares for that 80s punch and it shines on pads. An amazing plugin and worth having in a studio whether you are a beginner or professional.
348
My thoughts on Valhalla VintageVerb.
If you want dark, rich-sounding reverbs this is the plugin to use. Absolutely stunning sound quality, whether you're using it for a light dash of reverb to give any instrument that special "mojo" or going crazy with 100% MIX settings for special FX purposes. This plugin will give you the "lonely clean guitar tone" used by Mikael Akerfeldt when used with the right settings and a PRS guitar. Such a wonderful sound! Valhalla rocks!
93
reverb
reverb go brr
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161
Must-Have Reverb Plugin
Just buy it already. This plugin should be in everyone's toolbox, and it doesn't break the bank.
129
The Reason Why I Fell In Love With Reverb
When someone asks me what reverb they should get, not matter if they're a new producer or someone who's been doing this for a long time, I will always recommend this. I own a plethora of other reverb plugins. I have the Reflektor, the Waves IR1, the Waves TrueVerb, the UAD Lexicon 224, and the UAD AMS RMX16. A majority of those reverbs cost hundreds of dollars, however this $50 plugin just continues to make me smile every time I load it up. This is always the first reverb I use in a project. For just about everything. Sometimes I take a break to use the RMX16 but this is the one for me.
253
"One of the top three atmospheric Lexicon style reverbs in the box"
"I've grown to love some of the custom programs I have been able to make with this plugin. What I love most is the user interface and it's minimalistic design. Being a person who worked for years on Lexicon 224, 480L and PCM 70 through 92, I can really appreciate how Sean Costello of Valhalla has found a way to make the Lexicon sound more ready, willing and able than it ever was. This software is fun!"
584
My Top 5 Favorite Reverb
Usually went I'm using Kontakt The Grandeur Library. I would paired this reverb up with the modern setting. It amazing how this reverb just change the whole feeling coming out from the kontakt library itself especially empathizing on the clear notes.
Other than that, I also use this reverb to pair with the high hat, making it more realistic
143
Goto reverb on vocals
Love this reverb. Valhalla brings bang for the buck here. Great presets.
Artist usage
Add artist
In this Jan 16, 2024 Tech Talk for Telekom TV, Chlaer states, @(5:40) [https://youtu.be/A9hegE4WtLY?t=338] :
"The Valhalla Reverb, I think, is amazing".
Chlaer is shown using Valhalla Vintage Reverb in Ableton Live during this scene.
Anthony Rodriguez uses the ValhallaVintageVerb plugin in his studio, as shown in his Instagram post featuring his music production setup.
Used for vocals on "Gum Body" and "Time Flies", as stated by mix engineer Jesse Ray Ernster in this June 12, 2020 MusicTech interview and this June 2021 Sound on Sound interview respectively.
MusicTech, June 12, 2020, "Mile-high mixes, Kanye and NES: Jesse Ray Ernster on mixing Burna Boy’s African Giant"
BURNA’S VOCAL: “A big part of the job of a mixer is knowing when not to change things,” insists Ernster, “Burna’s vocal usually doesn’t require much work, and this song was no exception! His vocal stem arrived with all processing and effects printed into the track, and it sounded identical to the approved reference mix that he had grown accustomed to hearing, so my job was to enhance subtly, without changing the vibe too much!”
The first plug-in on the vocal chain was the Metric Halo Transient Control, with the sustain knob turned down to tame some of the effects and cut down room reverberation that had bled into the microphone, for a closer, more up-front vocal. Next, Ernster deployed the trusty bx_SSL E channel plug-in to boost 4.3khz and 13.5khz to help emphasize some of the consonants of Burna’s vocal, for better intelligibility.
Not one to believe in magic frequencies, Ernster’s technique is to “sweep around until the sound feels better to my ears.” Liking where the vocal was sitting against the track, but with certain phrases poking out unevenly, Ernster reached for a compressor. But his favourites – Rev E 1176, CLA-76 – all altered the ratio between vocals and effects too much, making the voice sound washed out. “I ended up rolling with a combo of clip-gain automation and some subtle compression on the Metric Halo Channel Strip. That glued the vocal into place without changing the character that we all loved from the reference mix.”
“After that, I used an instance of Soothe to tame a few whistley resonances that were poking through and causing harshness at 2.9khz and 5.3khz. The final step in the vocal processing sees the Acustica Amber3 (which emulates the Avalon AD2055) boosted at 25khz for some “silky air”. “I usually reach for the Crane Song Phoenix as a final touch to pull a bit of grit forward, and in this scenario, I used the Luster/Sapphire setting with a 68% mix. Finally, I used a FabFilter ProQ3 to cut 0.73dB at 490hz to dial back a resonance.”
VOCAL FX & DEPTH: “Lately, I’ve been focusing on depth within my mixes,” says Ernster. “It’s crucial to me that the singer is glued into a similar sonic environment as the rest of the arrangement.”
“I sent Burna’s vocal to a series of effects busses that I used to fuse the vocal into the metaphorical space of the song. On this song, I used a few different simple Waves H-Delay tracks set at 1/2, 1/4, 1/8th, 1/16th note, and a quick slap setting. All of these fed into reverb tracks with Revibe II, Valhalla VintageVerb (Dirty Plate), and Lexicon Medium Hall. I adjusted the blend of these multiple effects auxes until the blend felt glued, but also still similar enough to the reference mix – just better and deeper.”
Sound on Sound, June 2021, "Inside Track: Burna Boy 'Time Flies'"
“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.”
Alizzz's go-to reverb is the ValhallaVintageVerb. In his Aulart course, he mentions that he barely touches any parameters besides the decay time, as he loves its factory preset sound.
Used for the strings on "Solo", as stated by mix engineer Mark Ralph in this November 2018 Sound on Sound interview. An image of the settings for "Bollywood GRP 2" can be found here.
“The main treatments on some of the Bollywood strings come from the Valhalla VintageVerb, the SoundToys Little AlterBoy and the Cableguys ShaperBox. We could have asked the string players to do those pitch slides, but because we wanted things to sound slightly synthesized we used a combination of pitch-bend automation in NI Kontakt, when we resampled them, and Little Alterboy to do this. Instead of going smoothly between notes, it bends up to the notes, and this plug-in is really good for automated pitch shifts like that."
She shows it very briefly at 5:54 while explaining a mixing chain from her song "Floating Through A Frozen Atlantis".
At 3:15 Frank says "Yeah just our go to Valhalla vintage reverb, it's just always great. Just to give it some effects, open shape"
Alina Smith can be seen using the Valhalla DSP ValhallaVintageVerb which can be seen at 3:07 into the video
In the video "It doesn't immediately scream party banger": Breaka flipping a choir sample and making Are We There by MusicRadar Tech, at 4:47, Breaka is seen using the Valhalla VintageVerb plugin.
Used for vocals on Burna Boy's "Gum Body", as stated by mix engineer Jesse Ray Ernster in this June 12, 2020 MusicTech interview.
JORJA’S VOCAL: “Jorja’s vocals had a wonderful warm quality to them, so it was my job to retain that character while boosting clarity against the instrumental mix.”
First up in the vocal chain was the EQ module from Waves CLA MixHub, high-passing at 94hz to eliminate ground hum, traffic rumble, control-room bleed, and any knocks from into the microphone stand. “I only high-pass the sub information. I don’t allow the filter to reach any of the fundamental warmth frequencies in the low-midrange of the singer’s voice.”
For clarity and intelligibility of consonants, he also boosted some 4.1khz and 7.8khz. Then, also in CLA MixHub, used the “Bluey” 1176 mode, compressing gently at a 2:1 ratio. Next up was Waves CLA-76 with a slow attack and fast release to do some levelling of the signal.
“At that point, I was okay with the feel of the vocal texture, but it lacked evenness from phrase-to-phrase,” he says. And, when he pushed the compressor harder to level out the signal, it sounded worse. Ernster’s solution was fader automation on the source audio tracks before hitting the vocal bus compressor, giving the compressor less to do.
As with Burna’s vocal, Ernster brought out Acustica Amber3 to boost 25kHz, followed by Crane Song Phoenix (in Opal Dark Essence mode, this time). “The EQ boost drove the tape into a state of saturation in the extended top-end and contoured a smooth roll-off of those hard high frequencies. The 25khz boost would have sounded a bit too intense on its own, but the Phoenix provides the perfect compensation by gently rolling off the top end (with a gradual low-pass filter), providing the vocal with a silky, ‘classic’ top end that sounds present, but feels a bit dark, too.”
“After the first mix went out, they asked for more width on her vocal, so I slapped on the Valhalla Space Modulator with a slow rate, a tad bit of depth, and an 18% mix; this pushed a parallel signal of the vocal off to the sides of the mix for a bit of three-dimensional surreality.After copying Jorja’s lead processing to her harmonies and ad-libs, some work was required to get them to sit behind Burna’s voice including panning, effects levels, and some automation.
Conversely, her effects busses were very straight-forward: an 1/8th delay and a 1/4 delay feeding a Valhalla VintageVerb (Plate 1.85s); “all dialled in subtly to fit the ambience of the track. And I did two loud-and-obvious fader throws to the 1/8th delay send on the words “Care to have your own HEART (2:20), If you treat me kind and kept me close, We’ll always still PART”.
Album Usage
The Valhalla VintageVerb has been featured on the following albums:
bittersweet
Madison Beer (2025)
Blessings
Calvin Harris (2025)
Starlight
Disciples (2025)
Are We There
Breaka (2025)
Lucky
Bad Snacks (2022)
4:22
The Real Mike Dean (2021)
Eternal Blue
Spiritbox (2021)
Oceans & Galaxies
JAUZ & HALIENE (2021)
Falta
Tainy (2020)
Oddyssey
Amtrac (2020)
Ex Machina
Metrik (2020)
Be Honest (feat. Burna Boy)
Jorja Smith (2019)
Be Honest (feat. Burna Boy) [Acoustic]
Jorja Smith (2019)
By Now
Jay Pryor (2019)
Gravity
Metrik (2019)
The Walk / Bird Feeder
Tinlicker (2019)
All The Stars (with SZA)
Kendrick Lamar & SZA (2018)
Solo (feat. Demi Lovato)
Clean Bandit & Demi Lovato (2018)
Light
San Holo (2017)
Marsch (Extended Mix)
Will K (2016)
Closer
The Chainsmokers & Halsey (2016)
Genre Usage
Based on how artists on Equipboard use this gear, it is most commonly found in the following genres.
Used With
Based on how musicians on Equipboard use Valhalla VintageVerb, it is most commonly used with the following gear.
Community setups
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