J
jndietz
The Way It Moves
I'm not sure I understand reamping.
Is it pretty much recording one guitar part, then playing that guitar part out through your monitors while recording the sound of the room? To add a sort of "natural" reverb to the guitar and also expanding the stereo image?
Its confusing me, and Wikipedia's entry doesn't make sense to me.
Reamping is a process often used in multitrack recording in which a recorded signal is routed back out of the editing environment and run through external processing or reverb chamber. Originally, the technique was used mostly for guitars: it facilitates a separation of guitar playing from guitar amplifier processing — a previously recorded audio program is played back and re-recorded at a later time for the purpose of adding effects, ambience, or modified tonality. The technique has since evolved to include many other applications. Re-amping can also be applied to other instruments and program, such as recorded drums, synthesizers, and virtual instruments.
Is it pretty much recording one guitar part, then playing that guitar part out through your monitors while recording the sound of the room? To add a sort of "natural" reverb to the guitar and also expanding the stereo image?
Its confusing me, and Wikipedia's entry doesn't make sense to me.
Reamping is a process often used in multitrack recording in which a recorded signal is routed back out of the editing environment and run through external processing or reverb chamber. Originally, the technique was used mostly for guitars: it facilitates a separation of guitar playing from guitar amplifier processing — a previously recorded audio program is played back and re-recorded at a later time for the purpose of adding effects, ambience, or modified tonality. The technique has since evolved to include many other applications. Re-amping can also be applied to other instruments and program, such as recorded drums, synthesizers, and virtual instruments.