User Guide
Table Of Contents
Waves Greg Wells ToneCentric User Guide page 4
1.3 A Word from Greg Wells
“I’m always on the hunt for ways to pull more music out of the speakers. You get a beautiful effect when you run audio through healthy
vacuum tubes and big transistors wound the right way, and record it to a great tape machine. This plugin is an homage to the great
analog gear that leaves a wonderful sonic footprint on your sound.
“There are certain pieces of gear in my studio that consistently do this for me without fail: a holy grail a 1950s mono tube compressor, a
tape machine, and a custom-made vacuum tube console.
“Several plugins do a great job pointing in this direction, but at least to my ears I find the high-end often suffers. In developing
ToneCentric, it was important to me to keep things sonically quite full overall, but with an added depth of field.
“As with all the plugins in my Signature Series, there is an enormous amount going on behind the simplicity of the single-knob interface.
Different settings on the knob will yield different results and I encourage you to experiment with subtle to mid to drastic levels.
“Here
’s to
more tone-filled music! I hope you like it as much as I do.”
1.4 Components
WaveShell technology enables us to split Waves processors into smaller plugins, which we call components. Having a choice of
components for a particular processor gives you the flexibility to choose the configuration best suited to your material.
Greg Wells ToneCentric has two components:
• ToneCentric Mono – mono in to mono out
• ToneC
entric Stereo – stereo in to stereo out