Dolby Atmos Composer Lets You Produce Spatial Audio In Any DAW

Fiedler Audio has announced Dolby Atmos Composer and Dolby Atmos Composer Essential, plugins that they say bring Spatial Audio to any DAW.

Dolby Atmos Composer combines multichannel audio rendering and straightforward routing, 3D-panning of tracks, and signals from DAW tracks into the 3D world of Atmos.

The Dolby Atmos Composer’s Beam Plug-In allows creators to send their audio signals from anywhere in the session into the Composer, the home of the Dolby Atmos Renderer. Signals there can be panned to the Dolby Atmos bed and individually treated as objects in 3D space on one of the 128 independent channels available, including full 3D panning automation.

Advanced Mixing Workflow

With the Dolby Atmos Composer workflow, you can bring all the features of your DAW and your favorite plugins, into your Dolby Atmos mix. You can also record new tracks while already mixing for Dolby Atmos, something impossible when using certain standard Dolby Atmos workflows.

Exporting finished 3D audio projects into the standard ADM/BWF Format is very straightforward. They say that delivering sound and music for the major platforms is no challenge anymore – for the likes of Netflix, Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, and even Binaural Stereo for any distribution platform that is not yet supporting Spatial Audio.

World-class 3D Reverb

From version 1.5 onwards, the 3D reverb Spacelab will directly connect to the Dolby Atmos Composer, bringing world-class immersive reverberation to Dolby Atmos mixes with just one simple click.

Features:

  • Produce Dolby Atmos content on any DAW, even if the DAW is not capable of multichannel audio
    • Monitor on multichannel speakers from any DAW directly from the Dolby Atmos Composer plugin
    • Up to 9.1.6 for monitoring
    • Use personalized HRTF for binaural monitoring
    • Easy setup without the need of manual routing configuration, no external app required
    • Connects to Dolby Atmos Beam and Spacelab (from version 1.5 onwards)
  • Dolby Atmos Beam – panning plugin
    • Position your inputs as objects around the listener easily
    • Record movement with mouse as automation
    • Convenient mapping of parameters to all major Pro Tools control surfaces
    • Panning to composite speaker layout or as dynamic objects
    • Quickly set objects to predefined speaker positions
    • Spacelab connection (V 1.5 onwards)
  • Direct connection of our world class 3D reverb to the Dolby Atmos Composer circumventing DAW limitations
    • Spacelab sources as dynamic objects in Atmos
    • Arbitrary speaker layouts as composite in Dolby Atmos
    • Export/Import
  • Export Dolby Atmos ADM/BWF for distributing to all major platforms
    • Simultaneous export of speaker and headphone outputs of the renderer
    • Import ADM/BWF files for playback, corrections and re-export

Pricing and Availability:

Dolby Atmos Composer comes as a set of two plugins (Beam and Composer) , supporting all the major formats like AAX, VST3, and AU, and will be released during Q2 2023 for Euro/USD 249. Dolby Atmos Composer Essential offers basic Dolby Atmos support for Euro/USD 149. See the Fiedler Audio site for details.

3 thoughts on “Dolby Atmos Composer Lets You Produce Spatial Audio In Any DAW

  1. This seem interesting. Now if it would be possible to listen to Apple Music Atmos tracks in speakers without buying a home theater reciever and make some creative patching to the speakers or even upgrade to Dante – that would be something! But I guesss that’s more depending on Apple. But please make it work without Dante…..

    1. You an pair two Apple HomePod speakers and they will support Spatial Audio.

      Not the same as a surround system, obviously, but they sound really good for the price and is probably better than most people’s systems.

      1. I was more thinking of when you mix in atmos it’s very valuable to be able to listen to other peoples mixes in the same system as reference. The Dolby Atmos Composer product in the news post above makes it possible to mix in atmos, but my point is that it’s still not reasonable easy to listen to atmos mixes via your music production set up. And to me it appears that neither Dolby nor Apple seem to care much about it. I hope I’m wrong.

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