level meters. NOT!
Billy-I reread the post RE using a level meter while playing live. Probably would be useful but I have found that listening to the full mix and letting my ears guide me is the best way for me to set rhythm and solo levels. The AX30G lets me access 4 patches at a time so I will set up a clean rhythm and clean solo patches, and overdrive rhythm and overdrive solo patches.
yeah, boulder sound guy said that too. I agree with you guys. my
'home studio' is so caveman it's amazing I have done anything.
playing live and hearing everything live is different. I never really
have an issue with my own sound or levels. I'm the first one to get blasted
by my speaker cab, so i kinda know what's what.
the songs I have been working on with my buds are weird. first, I get
them via email as mp3 pro's and everything but ME is already on there and
mixed. no guitars at all.
and the one fella said "do like a pete townsend going into the chorus"
so I did. guess I didn't know my own strengh
oops! no windmill arm flailing ala pete townsend, but the ideas came
across. and it was way way off from what I did during the verse.
amp was in another room with the mike, and I was using headphones
in my 'soundbooth room' I couldn't tell it was that loud cause of all the
vocals and everything that I can't isolate and turn down. it's a little
different, that's for sure. live and learn though.
I like when guys send the whole thing as wave files via pando or
some huge file server. then, I could tweak this and that.
it's a little weird.
money would be better spent on a cube or maybe one of those 5 watt
epiphone tube amp heads that are going around. exact same price as
a micro cube, but no speaker(s)
I'm convinced. no level meters for me
