Search

Search News Articles

Category/Search Results

HumminGuru NOVA & EZ Vinyl Cleaners: 2 Machines To Get Your Vinyl Sounding Incredible

RIKIO ROCKS 0 21

The HumminGuru brand has become synonymous with vinyl care, making machines that clean records, remove static, and even clean cartridge styluses. Vinyl culture has continued to grow, and as people make bigger investments in their HiFi gear and vinyl collections, the need for more sophisticated record-cleaning devices has followed suit. Older or used records are [...]

Read More... from HumminGuru NOVA & EZ Vinyl Cleaners: 2 Machines To Get Your Vinyl Sounding Incredible

The post HumminGuru NOVA & EZ Vinyl Cleaners: 2 Machines To Get Your Vinyl Sounding Incredible appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

No. 1 in Value: the Black Lion Audio PG-P Power Conditioner

RIKIO ROCKS 0 19

The Black Lion Audio PG-P is the solution for killing any dirty power hum. There’s a certain kind of studio problem that feels almost philosophical and can drive you to madness if you let it. After years of Magnetic Studios being hum-free, it finally happened: a ghost in the machine started droning through my IK [...]

Read More... from No. 1 in Value: the Black Lion Audio PG-P Power Conditioner

The post No. 1 in Value: the Black Lion Audio PG-P Power Conditioner appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

Sennheiser HD 480 PRO Plus: An Excellent Closed-Back Studio Headphone Designed For Work And Play

RIKIO ROCKS 0 14

I love the 480 Pro Plus, and it’s not just because I’ve spent years using Sennheiser headphones across just about every listening scenario imaginable. From studio work to travel and DJ gigs, the company has consistently delivered products that balance durability, comfort, and sound quality, making them a mainstay in my travel and DJ bags.   [...]

Read More... from Sennheiser HD 480 PRO Plus: An Excellent Closed-Back Studio Headphone Designed For Work And Play

The post Sennheiser HD 480 PRO Plus: An Excellent Closed-Back Studio Headphone Designed For Work And Play appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

D16 Group Releases PunchBox 2

RIKIO ROCKS 0 14

The updated popular bass drum synth combines synthesis, samples, wavetable generation, internal effects and multi-output routing.

PunchBox 2 is built around four sound generators. Three of these are universal sample-based layers, designed to add transients, body, noise or supporting material around the main kick. The main Kick generator can run in five modes: Sample, 909, 808, 606 and Wavetable.

That structure allows users to combine familiar drum machine-style tones with imported or factory samples, as well as more contemporary synthetic material. The addition of wavetable generation is notable because it extends the instrument beyond conventional analogue-style bass drum emulation, giving producers more scope for designing pitched, distorted or less traditional low-end sounds.

The factory library includes 1,506 samples, 1,120 Master Presets, 243 Kick Presets and 66 wavetables. D16 Group has also included dedicated effects preset banks. For producers working across techno, house, drum and bass, electro, trap and other kick-led electronic styles, the size of the content library may reduce the need to start every sound from scratch.

The main Kick generator can run in five modes: Sample, 909, 808, 606 and Wavetable.Editing, effects and workflow tools

PunchBox 2 includes an Advanced Editor with real-time waveform preview and multi-stage envelopes, giving users visual feedback while shaping parameters over time. The plug-in also features real-time pitch detection, which is intended to help users tune kicks more directly within the instrument.

The effects section includes Bitcrusher, Distortion, Filter, Equalizer, Mono Bass, Limiter and Soft Clip modules. A Patchbay Config system provides 10 routing topologies for the internal effects rack, allowing different signal-flow options rather than a fixed processing chain.

Workflow additions include a Sticky Sample Browser for browsing, filtering and loading samples without leaving the design process, drag-and-drop WAV export for moving the current sound into a DAW, and multi-output routing with five stereo outputs for external mixing and processing.

PunchBox 2 is available as VST2, VST3, AU and AAX in 64-bit, with listed retail pricing of €99, $109 and £85, including taxes where applicable. Find out more here.

[social-links heading="Follow Attack Magazine" facebook="https://www.facebook.com/attackmag" twitter="https://twitter.com/attackmag1" instagram="https://www.instagram.com/attackmag/" youtube="https://www.youtube.com/user/attackmag" soundcloud="https://soundcloud.com/attackmag" tiktok="https://www.tiktok.com/@attackmagazine"] [product-collection]

Smash The House Radio ep. 682

RIKIO ROCKS 0 12
Follow Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/user/dimitrivegas-likemike?si=27234c562d5349d4 Relive the MADNESS with these exclusive Spotify playlists: The Official Tomorrowland Playlist: http://tomorrowland.com/spotify This is Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DX4Fbdh7T2WzS?si=c59b8cc25752427e The Smash The House Radio Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6fWY1nEQaNDdQo9IlijNwt?si=aaea8c2ea49a4fb9 Subscribe yourself for more Tomorrowland Music on: https://www.youtube.com/user/SmashTheHouse Follow us on social media: http://www.instagram.com/dimitrivegasandlikemike http://www.instagram.com/dimitrivegas http://www.instagram.com/likemike http://www.facebook.com/dimitrivegasandlikemike http://www.twitter.com/dimitrivegas http://www.twitter.com/likemike https://www.tiktok.com/@dimitrivegasandlikemike https://www.tiktok.com/@dimitrivegas https://www.tiktok.com/@likemike Sign up: http://eepurl.com/b3xUuf

5 Best KRK Rokit Studio Monitors for Home Studio (G4 Vs G5)

RIKIO ROCKS 0 10

Whether you're producing your first track or refining your mixdowns, your monitors shape every decision you make. KRK Rokit studio monitors have been a staple in home studios for years, and for good reason. They're affordable, reliable, and built with EDM producers in mind, delivering the low-end clarity that electronic music demands.

But KRK now has two generations sitting side by side on store shelves: the G4 and the G5. Same name, different internals, different sound. So which one actually deserves space on your desk? That's exactly what we're breaking down here.

At RIKIO ROCKS, we cover every corner of the EDM scene, and that includes the gear producers rely on to create the music we all love. Below, you'll find our picks for the five best KRK Rokit models for home studio use, with a direct G4 vs G5 comparison to help you choose with confidence.

1. KRK Rokit 5 G5

The KRK Rokit 5 G5 is the newest entry-level monitor in the Rokit lineup, and it handles compact home studio setups better than any previous generation. If you need accurate, full-range sound without overwhelming your desk, this is the model to consider first.

1. KRK Rokit 5 G5

Best for and who should pick it

The Rokit 5 G5 is built for bedroom producers and first-time studio builders who work in smaller treated or semi-treated rooms. It suits anyone mixing EDM, lo-fi, or bass-heavy electronic music who needs a reliable low-end reference at modest volumes.

If your room measures under 150 square feet, the 5-inch woofer gives you enough low-end extension without overloading the space with bass buildup that leads to bad mix decisions.

Sound profile and voicing modes

The G5 generation introduced a new DSP-driven voicing system with three modes: Flat, Boost, and Attenuation. The monitor leans slightly warm by default, which complements electronic music production where hearing how your low-mids sit against your kick is essential.

Switching between voicing modes directly from the rear panel takes seconds, and most producers find the Flat setting accurate enough for daily mixing without further adjustment.

Room tuning and onboard DSP controls

The rear-panel DSP controls include both high and low shelf filters, letting you dial in compensation for boundary effects near walls or corners. You handle all adjustments without external software, which keeps your signal path clean.

Connectivity, placement, and desk setup

The Rokit 5 G5 accepts both XLR and TRS inputs, connecting directly to any standard audio interface. At 5 inches, the cabinet fits cleanly on a desk with small monitor stands, keeping your tweeter at ear level without compromising your listening position.

Price range and what you get for the money

You'll typically find the Rokit 5 G5 priced around $200 per monitor at major retailers. For that figure, you receive onboard DSP, a Class D amplifier, and KRK's updated waveguide, making it one of the strongest entry points across the KRK Rokit studio monitors range.

2. KRK Rokit 7 G5

The KRK Rokit 7 G5 sits between the entry-level 5-inch and the larger 8-inch cabinet. It gives you more headroom and extended low-frequency reach without overwhelming a mid-sized studio desk.

Best for and who should pick it

This model suits intermediate producers working in rooms betwe

‘SLUTBASS’ Has Arrived — Luci Delivers Six Tracks of Bratty, Bass-Driven Chaos

RIKIO ROCKS 0 43

LGBTQIA+ artist Luci drops ‘SLUTBASS‘ EP, cementing her new experimental bass and hyperpop era. The project lands today with six tracks built for maximum club impact. It expands on the sound she introduced earlier this year through singles like ‘HOT IN PSYCHOTIC‘ and ‘PARASITE’. Across the EP, Luci layers sharp, playful vocals over distorted hooks, […]

The post ‘SLUTBASS’ Has Arrived — Luci Delivers Six Tracks of Bratty, Bass-Driven Chaos appeared first on EDMTunes.

Paul Leonard-Morgan Talks Watson, AI, And Protecting The Creative Process

RIKIO ROCKS 0 43

Paul Leonard-Morgan has spent much of his career moving between orchestra, electronics, film, television, games, and concert music, so the score for Watson fits neatly into the way he already thinks about composition. Released through Lakeshore Records, the Watson: Seasons 1 & 2 soundtrack follows a modern version of Dr. John Watson as he returns [...]

Read More... from Paul Leonard-Morgan Talks Watson, AI, And Protecting The Creative Process

The post Paul Leonard-Morgan Talks Watson, AI, And Protecting The Creative Process appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

RSS