H
hemmick reef
New member
My question, hope it's not too silly but I have been wondering about this for a while:
I put an amp in the corner of a room on the clean channel and a microphone several feet away to pick up the ambience.
1. I play the guitar through my amp quietly and record the sound.
2. I turn the amp up a notch and record again, and repeat this until I can't stand the volume any more.
The change in volume affects the reflections and causes a dramatic change in the sound.
I then go through the same process but put the mic in front of the amp and subdue room reflections and ambience but use a synthetic reverb instead.
Can I get that same effect from a synthetic reverb, or is it fixed with this parameter, and based on just a good signal entering the soundcard converter whatever the volume of the sound?
I hope my question makes sense.
I put an amp in the corner of a room on the clean channel and a microphone several feet away to pick up the ambience.
1. I play the guitar through my amp quietly and record the sound.
2. I turn the amp up a notch and record again, and repeat this until I can't stand the volume any more.
The change in volume affects the reflections and causes a dramatic change in the sound.
I then go through the same process but put the mic in front of the amp and subdue room reflections and ambience but use a synthetic reverb instead.
Can I get that same effect from a synthetic reverb, or is it fixed with this parameter, and based on just a good signal entering the soundcard converter whatever the volume of the sound?
I hope my question makes sense.