
fireflyva
New member
You rebel!
I can't stand hearing music with programmed drums, or played thru EZDrummer, Superior or Addictive , I mean, I can hear it but I can't respect that music in the same way, as if a drummer would have played it in a real drum without any triggers. Even so, I know the power of those tools.
Starting again, I'm not pro-real amp or pro-simulator, and fortunate in my recording place I have many valve amps (although they are really not mine), but also I can't deny the power of the GR5, although I pretty much understand your point of view. Like you said, when recording it's best to see every situation and use what is best. In live situations, for guitarists of 6 or 7 strings, I prefer a real amp, but the for example with 8 (where many amps struggles to deliver a clean F#, and In many cases if forms a snow ball on the 200 Hz range), the thing is different. The only band with a decent 8 string sound from a real amp, I've heard so far is Deftones (all the rest use digital stuff live).
Lke I said before, I understand your point of view, and in a another way, it happens the same thing to me, but with drums: I can't stand hearing music with programmed drums, or played thru EZDrummer, Superior or Addictive , I mean, I can hear it but I can't respect that music in the same way, as if a drummer would have played it in a real drum without any triggers. Even so, I know the power of those tools.
Yeah, there's bands that put everything through the PA. This one guy on another forum use to talk about how when he was doing gigs, no one was allowed to have any amps on stage or any kind of stage amplifictaion....everything was DI/sim/electronic and fed through the PA and controlled by the soundguy.
I guess you can make that work and sound fine....but at that point, why not just give the soundguy one of your CDs to play if it's THAT critical that every tone, every lick, every move, every night be 100% controlled and identical.
For me, that would take most of the "live" performance out of it, even if everyone is still there playing.
At that point you might as well be doing a Broadway show....
Live music performed by live musicians is... LIVE. Period.
You missed the point.
It was about giving up all the control to the soundguy....so that everything always sounded the same, every time, like it was some Broadway show. That may be "LIVE"...but it's also very "programmed".
From a guitar player's (or any player's) perspective....that's pretty lame......
....YMMMV.
that's often also the bands that think you have to play everything the exact same way night after night. If it's broadway then you must but for rock and roll I want to be able to go where the flow takes me.You're mistaken if you think that it must be "programmed" down to every knob, and that you have no other performance options when playing live.
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That people have such sentiments for reduced fidelity, clipping amps, I do not understand. There is nothing magic there, only the ghosts in your head. If you train your ear for hi-fidelity you will never want that.
But once again ..... it's a matter of what's correct for the type show you're doing.
To further illustrate my point - vocalists rarely sing into an mic'd amp. Have all these vocalists over the years been faking it all this time? What about drummers and acoustic guitar players? They nearly never mic an amp, then send that to the PA.
I keep all of my my amp knobs the same way for every show. On 11!
excuse me but isn't that what you've also just done here?Exactly, sloppy stoner rock you could sound different every night. ............................. It astounds me that anyone can make such a sweeping judgment on such superficial and arbitrary criteria.
As an improvisational player who earns a living and gets paid for the specific reason of my improvisational skills, I'm not sure why you disparage what I do by declaring it "sloppy stoner rock" when you don't know that much about what I do.