M
moresound
Loud Sun Studios
Yup my cats have a song that's going up the charts to #1 with a bullet!
Think I'll mic up the hamster cage next!

Think I'll mic up the hamster cage next!


I have to agree with Greg on this. Amp simulators (and modeling hardware/software in general) are getting better all the time - and they couldn't sound any worse than miking a cheap Crate.
I have to agree with Greg on this. Amp simulators (and modeling hardware/software in general) are getting better all the time - .
Don't let mic snobs sway you. Sims usually sound way better.![]()
It is not important to be able to make that differentiation. What if it is a shitty amp recording with tasteless post processing? Opps, I guessed sim.And 99% of the blowhard audiophile wannabes in here couldn't tell the difference between a good sim and a mic'd amp anyway, which means 100% of the music listening general public can't tell the difference.
Who cares what you guess? Bad is bad, good is good. I bet you couldn't tell a good sim from a real amp. You probably listen to sims and sampled drums all the time and go on thinking it's the real deal. If it's good, you can't tell. You're not supposed to be able to tell.It is not important to be able to make that differentiation. What if it is a shitty amp recording with tasteless post processing? Opps, I guessed sim.
But if I was shown various recorded guitar parts I could tell you what ones sounded great. My guess is they would most likely be amps.
Hi Sponge. Glad to see you're still with us.try all kinds of things
Well...Here's the big "gottcha" with that... Greg can really play guitar. It doesn't matter all that much what he's playing through. It's gonna' sound pretty good.Having said that ....... I'm gonna have to come down with the gerg on this. Listen to his recordings ....as much of a butt as he can be, he gets really great guitar sounds on his recordings. A lot of them are sims and I bet you can't tell which is which.
You can't put a sim flat on it's back with a mic hanging from the ceiling above it.I'm not exactly sure what the guy who said amp sims aren't as flexible was on about because they are a million times more flexible than a "real" setup.
I hear there are some feedback simulators out there, but I have a hard time imagining that any of them come close to the real thing, and the little I've heard has not been good.
Seems the main thing you can't do with amp sims is feedback. But if you're not planning to do that, then you can DI and get some pro results. Some styles of music and players take to it better than others. Try it and see.
But if you are still growing as a guitarist, going DI for everything might stunt your growth in some directions. It might also be said that it could accelerate growth as a guitarist in some ways, especially early on. Amp sims let you try all kinds of things quite readily, while most live setups are one trick ponies. But in my experience, one trick ponies always do the best tricks.
You can't put a sim flat on it's back with a mic hanging from the ceiling above it.
In a nutshell, the sim doesn't take into account even a fraction of the endless mic, mic position, amp position, crap in the room near the amp, etc options that one can do in the real world. Want the cabinet on the second floor and the mic in the basement? Better use the real thing.