Support |
some points to remember: - any distortions which sounds good on the guitar probably sounds bad on the loops, so they have to happen before the loop - monitoring is essencial (as max points out). Its not only volume or sound quality, but distance! remember that sound travels at 300m/s so 1 meter brings 3 ms, a delay that we just about accept when its happening in the notebook... - depending on style and music it can be important that the original and looped sound completely mix, or it can be that it helps to have them from different directions. Think about whether you want to be a soloist with a machine that does some background or whether all you do is one thing and what you play is just one layer of the whole - the contracter, the public, your spine, your car, your neighbours, even your wallet will love if you can do without a guitar amp. The same sound in the headphones, the monitors, the PA, on the recordings - its just waaay more practical! - It may not sound exactly as it did in the 60ies, but decent tools have been made, and once you get used to them, they may even sound better, at least much more versatile. - guitar speakers bundle upper middle range. a 12" speaker is not able to spread treble. The amp has a filter to push the frequencies out of the lame big cone, and the bundling makes that only your trowsers and one sector of the public hears those frequencies, and usualy far to much of it :-) - I dont understand why amps with open back are still built and bought. It just does not sound right. Bass reflex has been invented decades ago... - reverb only works in stereo. then it opens up... in mono it closes down... - whatever effort you make to get exactly the sound you want - the public will only profit because you feel well while playing. They hardly can distinguish a real AC30 from some modern simulator, and they dont care so much, they like a simple clean direct2desk sound if you play well... but you put on some big reverb, some really new sounds and stuff, they sure dig that! -- ---> http://Matthias.Grob.org