#209051 by jimmydanger
Thu Mar 14, 2013 1:48 pm
Thu Mar 14, 2013 1:48 pm
I'm a feedback player so I need real amps and speakers recorded at a loud volume with great microphones. You can't get that from a DI.
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jimmydanger wrote:I'm a feedback player so I need real amps and speakers recorded at a loud volume with great microphones. You can't get that from a DI.
jimmydanger wrote:No you're right George, most of what I play is by feel, so if I'm not feeling it, you get doo doo. You can get away with recording some parts directly but for the most part rock guitar should be recorded authentically, with amps, speakers and mics.
Thejohnny7band wrote:jimmydanger wrote:No you're right George, most of what I play is by feel, so if I'm not feeling it, you get doo doo. You can get away with recording some parts directly but for the most part rock guitar should be recorded authentically, with amps, speakers and mics.
Maybe I wasn't clear guys. I do record most guitar tracks with a mic and amp but with a modern DAW, you can route a clean DI signal to your recording track but route a badass plugin to your monitor so it sounds like 5 Marshall stacks are right behind you. The only difference is if you print the track with all the stank on it, you can't change it later. Really good recording engineers like choices so by going DI and mic/amp simultaneously, you can have your cake and share it with the engineer.
gtZip wrote:Would you rather set up and mic a real rig, or use a plugin to lay down tracks with?
Radio quality in mind.
yod wrote:gtZip wrote:Would you rather set up and mic a real rig, or use a plugin to lay down tracks with?
Radio quality in mind.
Scratch track doesn't matter...but always always always record the actual track with a mic so the guitarist can have the sound he wants it to have.
Otherwise you could get what I call the Rockman effect. It was ok in the 80s but lame today.
Mike Nobody wrote:yod wrote:gtZip wrote:Would you rather set up and mic a real rig, or use a plugin to lay down tracks with?
Radio quality in mind.
Scratch track doesn't matter...but always always always record the actual track with a mic so the guitarist can have the sound he wants it to have.
Otherwise you could get what I call the Rockman effect. It was ok in the 80s but lame today.
Wait...Rockman is lame?
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