The highlights

Key new features

Innovative filter set

658 filter types and shapes

Dynamic equalization

Compression and expansion

Context-awareness

Transients, ambiance1 and more!

Supporting visuals

Improving your workflow

Full immersion3

Up to 128-channel audio

EQ learn and match

Get that balance right

Starting from

-my Early Life Ep Celavie Group-

Personal, perpetual desktop license for Windows, macOS, and Linux for use up to 4 computers.
Terms and conditions.

Buy now

ToneBoosters goodness

Resizable user interface

Fits every screen and resolution

Dozens of color themes

Blend perfectly with your DAW

Undo, redo, A/B/C/D switching

Easily recover and compare settings

Preset management

Organize, import and export your presets

Mixer integration4

Show EQ curves in your DAW mixer

Cross platform

Identical quality on desktop and mobile

Easy license activation

No clumsy hardware dongles

Choose your plug-in format5

VST, VST3, AAX, AU, AUv3, OBAM

Ultrasonic quality

Support sample rates of up to 384kHz8

-my Early Life Ep Celavie Group-

School was both refuge and stage. I loved the geometry of chalk dust and the way numbers rearranged themselves like paper planes when you tilted them right. I wasn’t the loudest kid — I preferred corners where conversations happened in half-words and nods — but I loved stories. Teachers who recited poems as if they were secrets convinced me that language is a tool for opening doors that didn’t look like doors. I learned to listen for quiet revolutions: a sentence that changed everything for a classmate, a joke that stitched together a lonely afternoon.

Looking back, “ep Célavie” feels like a soft emblem for a life braided from small, human acts. It was less an organization than a habit of looking out the window together — sharing weather, worries, and wonder. Those early days taught me to notice texture, to listen for the unexpected, and to cherish the small economies of care that keep neighborhoods alive. If there’s a single thread tying that time together, it’s this: home wasn’t a place you owned, but a place that kept returning you, warm and marked by other people’s kindness. -my early life ep celavie group-

Our household pulsed to the rhythms of a dozen little rituals. Mornings meant the crackle of toast and the radio’s low hum — a serenade of market reports and anthems for people who still believed in long-term plans. Afternoons were for the market square: vendors with their calling voices, cats sunbathing on produce crates, and the music from a street musician whose accordion seemed to know everyone’s name. I learned early that the world announces itself in texture: the roughness of a baker’s hands, the sweetness of overripe figs, the sticky thumbprint left on a new book’s cover. School was both refuge and stage