Tape Fiasco is a brand-new plugin from Jonas Eriksson that combines three distinct time-based effects: Stretch, Stutter, and Varispeed.
I haven’t had much time with Tape Fiasco since installing the plugin, but I have to say right off the bat, it’s a lot of fun!
Whether you’re using all three effects simultaneously or one at a time, you can instantly push and push your sound wherever you want to take it.
Before I get into the three effects a bit more, there is a caveat.
While Tape Fiasco is available in AU and VST3 formats for macOS and Windows, the developer has only tested on macOS Sequoia 15.1 with Ableton Live 12.2.
I’m on macOS Sonoma 14.8.1 with Logic Pro 11.2.2, and can report no obvious issues so far (besides the common unidentified developer routine).
Please share any issues in the comments (and with the developer), whatever system you’re using, but especially Windows users.
At first glance, Tape Fiasco looks fairly complex, with a million things going on, but I love the interface.
Once you see the layout, the visual representation of every parameter is clear and intuitive. It doesn’t take long to start making instinctive adjustments on the fly for real-time sound design, which is what Tape Fiasco is all about.
The first section, Stretch, is a granular time-stretching effect. It captures audio into a buffer, then plays it back using overlapping grains.
You can adjust the speed, how often audio is captured, pitch, grain generation rate, and stereo spread. You can even randomize the grain read positions, reverse playback, and freeze the current buffer state, which is great for haunting drones.
The Stutter section captures audio slices and, well, stutters them.
Again, you have considerable control and manipulation over the effect. You can adjust the rate by note divisions or milliseconds, alter how often audio is captured, pitch, gate curve, pan, and crossfade time at slice loop points.
You also have a multi-mode filter, and can add variation to the effect by changing the stutter pattern and probability levels.
Both the Stretch and Stutter effects work well in unexpectedplaces when you adjust the mix level accordingly.
Varispeed emulates tape machine speed manipulation, and that might not seem as exciting as the other sections because we aren’t short of tape effects.
However, even on its own, it’s really lovely!
You have compression, saturation, wow/flutter, and a nice little DJ-style scratch effect for performance.
But I really like this effect with subtle saturation, and when the Speed is only slightly warping the sound. It’s simple, but it sounds great.
Put all three sections together, and you’re in a world of time-bending bliss.
Please remember to let us know how you get on and what system you’re on. Cheers!
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Last Updated on January 20, 2026 by Tomislav Zlatic.



