
maestro_dmc
Uses Paramedic EQ
+1 on the EV635 mic.
Sweet little mic. Easy to get a good sound with.
Sweet little mic. Easy to get a good sound with.
... until you try to seat it in the mix.for those who hate on DI tones, go to ultimatemetal.com, head to the andy sneap forum...then to the "rate my tone" subforum
from there, check out any of the clips of the peavey revalver MKIII plug. paired with some good cabinet impulses, it sounds scary close to a mic'd amp.
... until you try to seat it in the mix.
I won't go into that.
again, check out the revalver III clips that people have posted on the andy sneap forum @ ultimatemetal.com
most of them include some sort of drums and sometimes bass as well. i'm not saying that this is the end-all, be-all of guitar tone, but you're just as likely to get a usable hi-gain tone with this plus some GOOD impulses as you are mic'ing up an amp in your bedroom
I won't go into that.
All I can speak from is my own experiences with DI guitars. I posted a song that I recorded all the guitar tracks DI (straight into a Fostex MR-8, using the efx built in). The only negative comments on the track were about the DI guitars. I've recorded other things DI and had similar results: The guitars lack space. They are in your face, and turning up the levels of everything else in the mix gets you clipping. Turning the guitar tracks down and they are lost in the mix.
I even tried to take the guitar tracks through modeling software. While they sound a little better on their own, when I added them to the mix, same result. Too "in your face".
I don't like it, can't do anything with them. But I applaud anyone who can. There is a place and time for DI tracks. I just never found it in my mixes.
BINGO! A very objective and well-stated explanation, IMHO.The biggest issue for me, and I'm sure many others, is noise--I can't sit in my "studio" and crank up a guitar amp. I never could, and so I've grown accustomed to modelers.
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I haven't had any problems getting the gits to "sit" in the mix, and I'm not EQ-ing the piss out of them either. I suspect this has more to do with psychology (mine!) and nostalgia for pre-digital sound. I'm not saying miking an amp is not the way to go--its the best way to get the tone your after, depending on the type of music you play.
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To suggest that modelers are good because you can do things fast is not a reason to use them. I used them because I had to, and now I use them because I want to.
The results you get out of a modeler have a LOT to do with how well you understand how to make an amp sound good.What I have just fairly recently come to realize are that the more one works with a modeler - which often happens out of necessity for many home guitarit/recordinsts - the better their modeling technique gets, and the far better the ultimat e sound they get out of their mixes. Necessity is the mother of invention.
there ALWAYS a lot of arguing over the modeler vs amp thing.Now I caused one massive debate!