There are four of them, KristalChorus, KristalMultiDelay, KristalReverb and Kristalizer. The program offer 2 VST inserts per channel and 3 VST inserts on the main bus. It comes with a selection of its own plug ins, which I will get into in a bit, but it supports VSTs, so anything'll go if ya don't like what's there. Less lock ups and dropouts makes for happy music making. I found CPU drain much lower than anything else I've ever used, which is a bonus for those of us on older machines, and much less 'stuttering' when you start to pile on the heavy effects, reverb and stuff, than on for example Cubase. Lets you get on with what youre doing, concentrating on the music, not the software. Record and playback options.cutting and editing features.eq adjustments and plug in options. Nothing too fancy to complicate it.nothing but what you need. Think of this programme as the bare bones of any high cost commercial recording app. What's more, if you missed the magazine you can simply download it for free from It's a nice small download for such a useful app. It's a full version, no limitations, seems cool. I happened across Kristal as a freebie on Computer Music magazine, and, being bored with my current set up thought id give it a try. Note: The bulk of this review was completed by flametheband, who actually worked with the app more, and continues to use it, dB Masters added the more technical details of the review of this app. The best free multitrack app on the market today?
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