Most players have run into this problem. Over time, we create lots of sounds for different songs. We spend time meticulously tweaking a plugin to get it just right and then save a plugin preset. Then, a few months later, you need that sound, but wait….what plugin was used for it?

Or maybe you have created five different variations of a string sound, using different plugins for some of them. A bit later, you know you need that “Soft Symphonic” sound, but with which plugin did you create it?

But wait – it gets worse. There’s that other sound where you layered three different plugins and ran them through various effects, some conceptually using “Inserts” and others conceptually using “Sends” and the volumes and balances have been set up just right. How do I get it back and, oh year, I’m in a hurry.

Gig Performer has two features to help you with these needs:

1. GP User Presets
2. Favorites

Let’s first take a look at GP User Presets

The unified GP User Preset management

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Although most plugins have their own preset management, they tend to work differently, certainly if the plugins are from different developers. However Gig Performer offers its own solutions for managing presets and adds some powerful workflow shortcuts.

If you open the editor for any plugin, there is always a header area with two buttons on the right edge.

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Clicking the rightmost button (displayed with three dots) brings up a new menu and the second item lets you save the current sound of the plugin as a GP User Preset. As we will see in a moment, it actually does a little more than that.

The Gig Performer Plugin editor Menu

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Suppose you have just created a nice new pad sound for your romantic songs so perhaps you might call it “Soft Romance Pad”

Naming and saving a GP User Preset

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In the example above, I happen to be using a plugin called the Legend which emulates a Minimoog but with some extra features such as polyphony and some built-in effects. When you save the preset, several things will happen:

First of all, the preset will be saved in a subfolder called Legend, i.e. the name of the plugin. The parent folder will be named after the manufacturer of the plugin and that folder lives inside the Presets subfolder of your Gig Performer documents folder.

Folder hierarchy for GP User Presets

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You should always respect this hierarchy and never try to save a preset to a different folder (although you can absolutely create new sub-folders if you want to further classify your presets and we’ll see a benefit to that as well below)

Secondly, that preset will show up automatically in the main popup menu that appears when you right-click inside the Wiring view. That menu is used to choose a plugin you want to use. It appears in a section called User – GP User Presets

A saved preset shows up automatically in the main menu for inserting plugins

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Of course, with this popup menu, you still need to know which developer and plugin to select to find the preset. However, when you bring up the quick plugin finder, formally called the “Plugin, Favorite or Preset Finder” dialog (press CMD-P), things get more interesting. Here’s what that dialog looks like when you first open it.

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As you can see, it displays a list of all your plugins. But now, start typing the word, “romance” into the filter area at the bottom

Finding a sound using substring search

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As you can see, the list has been reduced to one item, your saved preset. It also conveniently shows you the name of the plugin and the developer. If you now insert that preset, Gig Performer knows that an instance of the Legend is needed, and so it will automatically create and insert an instance of the Legend into your wiring view and set it to the Soft Romance Pad sound, ready for you to use.

By the way, as an aside, if you prefer to use a different application to search your file system for presets, e.g. Spotlight on the Mac or Copernic on Windows, you can just drag the found file from the Finder (Mac) or Explorer (Windows) into Gig Performer’s wiring view and again, the appropriate plugin will be created and set to the desired sound.

By judicious naming of your presets, perhaps even including keywords in them, you can quickly find the sound you need without having to remember which plugin you used to create the sound.

Incidentally, GP User Presets aren’t just for sounds and effects. If you have configured a MIDI In Block (say) with certain channels remapped or blocked, or perhaps some MIDI event blocking, transpose or splits, you can save that as a GP User Preset to quickly reuse it again in the future.

Favorites

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The Favorites mechanism extends the concepts of user presets to apply to collections of interconnected plugins. Suppose you have created a really nice piano with an added phaser, some EQ so the sound fits into a band context and perhaps a reverb effect implemented similar to using Send.

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Select the blocks, right-click and click on Save as Favorite…

Saving some interconnected plugins as a favorite

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I am going to save it with the name, Bright Rock Piano

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After you have saved it (and this should not be surprise), that favorite will now show up in the popup menu…

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…and in the Quick Plugin, Favorite or Preset Finder.

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As with GP User Presets, you can just insert a favorite into the wiring view and all the plugins will be inserted, connected together and with the right sound, ready to use.