Everyone likes presents so here’s a free plugin. One of our favourites it has just been updated. Sweetcase from Noiseash is a satisfying sample based electric piano virtual instrument with enough facilities to cover the classic sounds and more. The update adds new effects, UI tweaks and Apple Silicon compatibility.
Sweetcase Features
Warm, realistic and customisable vintage electric piano sound with 3D GUI
All samples recorded through classic analog gear
Multiple round robins and velocity layers for realistic sound.
Bass Boost, Bell, Modulation (Pan, Tremolo and Pitch)
Sustain Level & Hold Time Envelope controls
Algorithmic Reverb, Phase Modulation, Sleek Parametric Eq
CPU friendly
Resizable GUI
The new version 1.4.0 includes:
Added: Native Apple Silicon Support (VST3, AU, AAX).
Added: Crush (Degrade Distortion) Effect.
Added: Ensemble (Vintage Chorus) Effect.
Added: Preset Dropdown List.
Added: Draggable GUI Resizer to the right bottom corner.
Added: New Menu & Preset Browser Design.
Added: Direct access to the Product Manual.
Added: Tooltip - Added: Enable OpenGL.
Added: Undo & Redo.
Added: Stereo Width control.
Added: Easy Sample Folder Management.
Improved: Eq UI.
Improved: DSP & UI Performance.
Fix: Logic Pro Automation Read issue.
Fix: So many decimal values on Apple Silicon Macs.
System Requirements
Windows
VST3, AAX plug-in versions (64-bit only)
Windows 7 64-bit or above
VST3 / AAX host
Intel I3 2ghz or above / AMD Athlon 64 X2 or above
4 GB RAM / 2 GB free space on the system drive
Min. 1024×768 Screen Resolution
Ability to download
Mac
VST3, AU, AAX plug-in versions (64-bit only)
macOS 10.9.5 or above
VST3 / AU / AAX host
Intel I3 2ghz or above / Native Apple Silicon (except for AAX)
4 GB RAM / 2 GB free space on the system drive
Min. 1024×768 Screen Resolution
Ability to download
How Do I Get This Plug-in?
Use the button below to go to the Noiseash website and download the appropriate installer. Run the installer and move the samples folder which downloads with the installer to your preferred location. The first time you open Sweetcase you’ll need to locate the samples folder.
Julian Rodgers is Editor of Production Expert. He has a background in live sound and has been a Pro Tools user since 2001. He lives by the sea in West Cornwall where he plays piano, bass and guitar equally badly and is an avid collector of microphones and opinions about all things audio.