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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 25 2009 at 05:29 |
^ cool! I know that you know the X3. I still don't agree with how you liken it to a preamp though. It has a line out which you usually connect to your mixer directly, without any amp in between, while your typical preamp has an output that you wouldn't normally connect to your mixer, but to a power amp. Of course you can set the X3 to act as a preamp though, and I know that many guitarists use it that way. Nothing wrong with that, as long as you accept the hassle of having to mike the cabinet.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
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Posted: May 25 2009 at 07:16 |
I guess, we had a different idea of looking at it. I wasn't looking at it from the perspective of it having the line out connected to mixer approach, since I connect my X3 Live to active monitors and thus any power amp/speaker configuration I would need to use at any point in time.
Moving on now, I'm going to start trying to record with this thing now that I believe I've dialed in some decent tone. As long as I don't run into any hassles, I'll try to post clips once my internet connection is back up to 12mbps.
Edit: Just recorded some stuff, but unfortunately clips have to wait, but I got 4.67ms of latency. I guess this means I'll be keeping the POD for a while yet:)
Edited by Petrovsk Mizinski - May 25 2009 at 07:37
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 25 2009 at 12:37 |
^ did you achieve the 4.67ms with Asio4All? If so, you should consider that AFAIK the Line 6 driver software switches to 16bits when using Asio4All ...
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: May 25 2009 at 23:48 |
^I used ASIO4All, yes.
And before you ask, I tried the ASIO X3 Live driver and Line 6 decided
you only needed to go as low as 128 samples for the buffer size.
This would be great except for the fact latency is not going to be any
lower than 10.9ms. Why Line 6 decided to cap the lower limit at 128
buffers just really just beyond me. I also can't get lower than a sampling rate of 48KHz which also doesn't help latency.
If I want lower, ASIO4All is the only driver that is going to get me there since it allows me to use a 96 KHz sampling rate and a smaller buffer size. So if it's true that I can only get 16 bits, what I lose in bits I make up for in the sampling rate. How that actually compares in the real world is another thing obviously. Plenty of people are recording their X3 Live through ASIO4All because they suffered the same problem of the Line 6 ASIO driver not allowing a buffer size below 128 samples and yet some of these guys sound amazing, so I'm really not concerned as long as the latency is below 5ms which it is:)
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 26 2009 at 01:51 |
^ That's all true, but if you have a X3 why bother with latency anyway? Using the X3 for monitoring you can get near zero latency ...
Edited by Mr ProgFreak - May 26 2009 at 01:53
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: May 26 2009 at 02:18 |
^Not entirely sure what you mean. Ableton Live Suite 8 is telling me I'm getting 10.9ms with the POD X3 Live ASIO setting, so are you saying that since I'm using the X3 Live as my soundcard/monitoring anyway I should actually be achieving less latency in the real world and that Ableton is showing me a number with errors? Sorry if that was perhaps a dumb question, but I honestly wasn't sure if I'm reading what you're saying correclty
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 26 2009 at 02:32 |
It's difficult to explain.
I'm talking about a scenario where you want to use the X3 to record an audio track in Ableton Live, with several other tracks (including the click) to play to.
The important thing to know is that Ableton compensates for the latency of the inputs and outputs (at least if you tell it to do latency compensation in the options menu).
Now, the trick is not to monitor your playing through Live (select "Off" instead of "In" or "Auto" for the track you're recording). Arm the track for recording and play something ... you should hear the sound generated by the X3 directly, not the signal routed from the X3 to the computer, then from the Line 6 driver to Live (via ASIO), then back to the Line 6 driver (via ASIO), then to the X3 again. That's the so called roundtrip latency, which you don't want during recording.
So in a nutshell: Turn off monitoring in Live 8 and try to use the X3 for that instead. Once you do that, ASIO latency is taken out of the equation, as long as you make use of the Latency Compensation in Live 8.
What I do is I switch between Asio4All and Line 6. When I want to record guitar I switch to the Line 6 drivers with very high buffer settings (1024), since latency isn't an issue (as explained above). But when I want to record midi instruments I switch back to Asio4All, since for those instruments I have to monitor through Live/ASIO.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
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Points: 25210
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Posted: May 28 2009 at 04:29 |
debrewguy wrote:
Petrovsk Mizinski wrote:
I don't buy the sound comes from your fingers bullsh*t and never really did.
If
it's true, just walk onto the stage with nothing and apparently the
sounds of the guitar and amp are going to magically going to come out
of your hands and fingers.
Bullsh*t.
Tone is the result of many many factors.
The
body wood of the guitar, the materials in the bridge and type of
bridge, the wood of the neck, the wood of the fretboard, how the neck
is constructed, what brand of strings, what gauge of strings, what the
nut is made of
and then what the frets are made of.
Then we have
what amp settings you use, what amp you use in particular , what pedals
you have connected, whether they are true bypass or not.
On an album it comes down to how it mixed and mastered, how many times you tracked the guitar and what mic you used etc etc.
On
stage, it's about the venue size, whether the floor transmits too much
bass, whether you are going direct to FOH and coming out of studio
monitors, whether you are going through your amp mic'd up and sending
that to FOH.
In the end, your fingers can shape things like picking dynamics, articulation, subtlety, nuance.
When
you hear a great guitarist, like Guthrie Govan or David Gilmour, they
have that ability to do that, but they also choose certain gear too
because they have tonal needs in mind.
DB - Yes, but their sound, their style is in their playing, right.
So debrewguy, tell me why you had a Tube Screamer modified if you apparently think you can sound great without decent gear?
DB - didn't get it modified, bought as such. For $42CAD. found out afterwards. It has a bit more gain to it.
f**k that man, don't spend money, just walk into a room empty handed and guitar tone magically comes from your hands and fingers
DB
- a good guitar player can make a decent amp & guitar sound good. A
poor guitar player will not sound better no matter what set up he has.
I have a 30 yr old Yamaha FG-325. I sound not too bad on it. Mostly
because of tricks (suspended chords, open chordings etc.). I've had
semi-pro players pick it up & make it sound like a $2000 guitar.
Fact is, my old practice amp sounds like a buzzy piece of sh*t no matter how much I practiced and get better as a guitarist.
I sound 1000 times better than my Line 6 POD because it has the tonal options I need.
DB
- I'm not saying that you can't get a variety of tones out of a
multi-effects unit. I'm saying that too often, the technology
overcomes the actual playing. It's great to hear someone sound exactly
like Gilmour, Angus, or Hendrix. I prefer to hear someone play , say,
David Gilmour, on a SG through a Vox; or Santana via a Strat & Jazz
Chorus. It makes it interesting to see what they can do. But technology is & should be nothing more than the icing on the cake. Even
the few pedals I have won't make me sound like Billy Gibbons, SRV, or
Rothery. And at most, the only other effect I want is an echo/delay
pedal. Too often, you see guitarists that get the exact same set
up as their idols, yet can't sound like them. Used to be, until the
early 80s, that most bands had their own sound. BTO used Garnet amps,
Blackmore with his Strat through some sort of Tape Machine as a mega
boost before hitting his amp, Jimmy Page with his Les Paul tricked out
so that he could choose a thousand variations from his pickups (Neck
& Bridge, HB or Single Coil, mix of them all), Gilmour and his
succession of delay/echo pedals, Strats through Marshall, Gibson
Firebirds through Twin Reverbs, Hand made guitars throug Vox and /or
deacky. Now it's pile on the effects, triple rectify, and still come out sounding like everyone else trying to sound like X, Y, or Z. I
know, they're fun. And I had my eyes on a used Boss GT-8, whose owner (
a semi pro jazzbo) had a bunch of great clean jazz sounds preset in the
unit. $300 CAD plus taxes (14%). Then it hit me. Upgrading my
Pickups on my Epiphone LP Custom would make it sound better. So I've
picked up a pair of '57 classic re-issues. I've got my Traynor
YCV50's clean & gain channels (gain also has a boost function).
I've got the aforementioned TS9 mod, the Boss FBM '59 (which I'll see
how the new pickups sound with it. I may sell it), a Line ToneCore
Ubermetal, a Boss CE-2 CHorus. And may, I'll get a delay/echo pedal. BEtween
all of that, I should be short of time if I ever decide to find all the
different sounds that I am able to get without resorting to a
multi-effects unit and try to sound like someone else. I do like
to get certain tones. But in the end, I'm playing what I got in my
hands. Plugged into what I have as an amp. The middle part may change,
may expand, but is not likely to, may decrease (likely). Indeed, many
times, I don't use all the pedals in a playing session anyway.
Concentrate on the song.
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I can bet it's just really FG-325 sounding like it's being played by a
good player rather than it sounding like " a 2000 dollar guitar".
Someone else picking up a guitar does not change the inherent tone of an instrument.
Player from player is a variable, but the inherent tone of an instrument is set in stone.
It's not a hard concept to understand mate.
I don't even understand why you've come into this thread and even started just saying this.
I didn't buy an X3 Live with the intention of sounding like my "idols"
whatever that even means anymore, I bought it because I needed a
flexible device that is going to offer me different
amp/cabinet/mic/stomp box simulations and also have a unit that allows
me to record directly into my computer without having to f**k around
with mic placement.
I live at home with my parents and II have a limited budget.
If you could care to donate money for me to live by myself so I can
afford a house and various tube amps and real pedals, microphones,
another recording interface, then hey I can start recording via a tube
amp.
But unfortunately that is not going to be the case so the X3 Live is
the best solution I can have right now given my budget and my living
situation.
I need 4 channels.
One is an extremely clean sound with no break up
The second is a clean sound with breakup
The 3rd is high gain rhythm tone
the 4th is a high gain lead tone. I also would a need a MIDI control output. The only amps of that I know off the top of my head that can do this is a Marshall JVM and MI Amplification Revelation. I do not have 3399 AUD nor the 3699 AUD for either amp respectively. Nor do I have a place to consistently crank them up to make them sound really good.
The fact is, no matter what gear you have, you need to tweak it to make it sound the best.
Some of my most favorite albums of all time have been recorded with
amps that require months and months of tweaking to sound amazing.
Images and Words was recording using Mesa Boogie amps, notorious for being extremely tricky to dial in.
But isn't it funny how now it's known as one of the greatest prog metal
albums of all time, but I do not see your name on the credits of any
extremely innovative and creative albums despite your apparently
"concentrate on the song" attitude. Petrucci also got some pretty
gnarly tone as well on that album to boot. Opeth has used a Boss GT-8 for an album too. Whether Opeth is to your taste or not, a lot of people liked Ghost Reveries, so clearly the GT-8 did not get in the way of the writing process. Steve Wilson has used a POD for either Deadwing or In Absentia (don't remember which exactly) yet he got great tones and made an album a lot of people loved.
Tweaking and technology only gets in the way of the music creation if someone lets it.
When I bought my X3 Live, within about 4 days, of perhaps 2 hours of
tweaking per day, and even between tweaking to check the tone I'm
constantly writing new riffs, I was already recording and putting down
some music on my computer. Using a modeling unit/amp is a totally reasonable and rational approach for recording/using for writing music just as using an amp cranked up and mic'd up.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer
Joined: December 24 2007
Location: Ukraine
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Points: 25210
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Posted: May 28 2009 at 07:46 |
A bit more playing around with the POD today. One thing I found a little unfortunate and a tad disappointing was that unless I used the semi-parametric 4 band EQ I can't get usable sounds out of the POD. Of course, however once you do apply some EQ, you can start getting really good tones. Okay, so I found out several days ago, but today I tried more amp models, and all the high gain models need the semi parametric EQ otherwise they sound like sh*t.
After a bit of screwing around and finally figuring out how to get the Line 6 Bender to work, I found it was unfortunately even worse than I predicted. I already knew from reviews before buying it that you can't play more than one note at once without severe pitch distortion between however many intervals you try to play, but I thought that since at least you can get usable sounds out of it when you set it to fixed pitch shift, you could surely be able to make it work using the expression pedal, only playing one note at a time and then shifting the note. Unfortunately that was not the case, the pitch shifting effect when using the pedal was not able to yield results that were in tune, effectively making the feature completely useless unless you deliberately want that crap sounding out of tune pitch bend.
Makes me want an Axe FX..........
Edited by Petrovsk Mizinski - May 28 2009 at 07:47
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 28 2009 at 11:17 |
^ I think you always need some EQ to get a good tone ... simply because every guitar is different. A cool thing that you can do with the POD is to record the dry signal and then not pass it to the POD-Farm plugin directly, but route it through a EQ in Ableton first. Gives you much more flexibility than the 4 band semi parametric EQ of the POD X3.
Edited by Mr ProgFreak - May 28 2009 at 12:36
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: May 29 2009 at 03:25 |
^What I meant was, the 3 band+presence controls by themselves were not enough to make any of the high gain simulations usable. There was just the dreaded Line 6 fizzyness, forcing me to use the semi parametric EQ. On a real amp (I mean a proper, quality tube amp) I wouldn't have to resort to an outboard EQ for a good tone for just practicing or playing live purposes. I played a Mesa Boogie Lone Star Special with switchable wattage a little while back allowing me to put it on 5 watt mode and crank it even in the store and was able to get great tone with nothing in between the guitar and amp except for one cable. Granted the tone wasn't suited to metal playing but more liquid high gain soloing, but the point being all I used was the controls on the front of the amp, just the gain, bass/mid/treble/presence and volume controls and just smooth creamy tone without the fizzy harshness that seems inherent to Line 6 stuff.
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 29 2009 at 13:26 |
^ here we go again, comparing €300 gear with €3000 gear ...
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: May 29 2009 at 23:34 |
^In Australia, it's actually 1299 AUD gear versus 4295 AUD gear. Either Line 6 stuff is extremely cheap in Germany or Mesa Boogie stuff is even more over priced in Germany than Australia. Unless you were talking about me having paid 590 AUD for mine though, but I prefer to talk about it in terms of brand new pricing for both. I actually take back a little of what I said. The Soldano SLO-100 model, after I turned the 4 band semi parametric EQ off was still quite usable, it's actually a lot of the amp models that I believe to be more suitable for my rhythm tone that require the 4 band semi parametric EQ. I don't really need the Ableton EQ until post processing anyway, for practicing and jamming just using the semi parametric EQ yields great results for my rhythm tones. Interestingly, I couldn't get the Peavey 5150 to sound great at all. I got okay at best out of it, but since it's such a widely modeled amp you'd think they would have done a better job of getting it right. I tried every possible combination of cabinet/mic models, 4 band semi parametric EQ settings, nothing could get it better than okay sounding. Actually quite a few other people share my sentiments on the 5150 model not being particularly good, so it's not just me anyway. The 5150 model on the Roland Cube is better than the X3 Live, and the Roland Cube was released years earlier. It's not a great concern, since anyway I've found great lead tones using the SLO-100 and great rhythm tones usng the Dual Recto and Triple Recto models but still, I can imagine people buying this and hoping the 5150 model is going to kick ass when it doesn't even sound that good.
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 30 2009 at 01:24 |
^ we could go on like this for months and never reach an agreement. I really like some of the X3 models, and I don't even have to use the semi parametric EQ to get a sound that's ok for practicing purposes. I'm sure that not all of the 78 models sound good, and maybe none of them is truly great, but I really don't care. I won't spend a four figure amount on a tube amp that might give me a better sound but is *much* less convenient to use.
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Posted: May 30 2009 at 03:21 |
It's not so much an argument but I'm making more of a commentary and just sharing my opinion on what I think works well, what doesn't work so well, what sounds good and what doesn't. Ultimately I think some of the stuff I'm saying could be useful for potential X3 Live buyers. I think a product like this has a lot of pros and cons, much like many other products and it's particularly interesting to me and possibly others hopefully to know what some of these are. Also just tested the two Diezel VH4 models. I've never had the pleasure of using or even seeing one of these in real life, but I'm getting good sounds from the simulations, so definitely another one I might consider trying out for recording purposes perhaps.
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Mr ProgFreak
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Posted: May 30 2009 at 03:30 |
Of course I think your comments are useful ... people who think about buying an X3 Live should know that a real tube amp still has the potential to sound much, much better. Eventually Line 6 will publish a new version of their modeling technology, and I'm sure that it will sound better than their current technology but there will still be tube amps that sound better.
I know that all this must be really confusing to those who never played a real tube amp and are now wondering whether they should get one or a modeling amp instead. It's a different situation for me - as a beginner I had a solid state amp (Peavey), then I got a tube amp (Engl) ... and today I'm using a modeling amp. So I know all three worlds (analog solid state, analog tube, digital modeling) first hand ...
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GaryB
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Posted: June 01 2009 at 09:10 |
I am technologically challenged, period.
When jamming along with CDs in my music room or getting together with friends for impromptu jams I use a Fender Blues Jr amp (easy to carry) and a Pedaltrain with a Jim Dunlop wah wah, and Danelectro Cool Cat, Daddy-O, Surf n Turf (where do they get those names?).
A few years back I met a very nice lady named Michelle Penn who is an Indy recording artist with five CDs to her credit. She sang and played two or three guitar parts on the CDs. We would often sit around and discuss different equipment and she kept referring to something called a Pod that she used for recording. I was clueless.
I then decided to record my own music just for fun so I picked up a Boss BR864 digital recorder with about a hundred different built-in effects. I then recorded a ten song CD with three to five tracks on each song. By using the built-in effects I recorded all the tracks (including bass tracks) using the same acous/elec guitar. I didn't have speakers for the recorder so I used headphones.
Like I said, I'm not a techy but I had a lot of fun with this project and can now see that all of this new equipment gives someone endless possibilities when it comes to their personal music.
BTW...I recently picked up the Jimi Hendrix Signature pedal by Digitech. It's pretty hi-tech for me but I plan on spending more time with it (not to sound like,or to cover Hendrix but just to see what all it can do).
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jimidom
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Posted: June 01 2009 at 10:32 |
GaryB wrote:
Like I said, I'm not a techy but I had a lot of fun with this project and can now see that all of this new equipment gives someone endless possibilities when it comes to their personal music.
BTW...I recently picked up the Jimi Hendrix Signature pedal by Digitech. It's pretty hi-tech for me but I plan on spending more time with it (not to sound like,or to cover Hendrix but just to see what all it can do). |
That's true. The possibilities for direct recording alone with that Jimi Hendrix pedal are pretty impressive. You've got Marshall Plexi tones, Univibe, Octavia, Fuzz Face, and Clyde Wah all in a single pedal.
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"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." - HST
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Petrovsk Mizinski
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Joined: December 24 2007
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Posted: June 01 2009 at 12:17 |
GaryB wrote:
I am technologically challenged, period.
When jamming along with CDs in my music room or getting together with friends for impromptu jams I use a Fender Blues Jr amp (easy to carry) and a Pedaltrain with a Jim Dunlop wah wah, and Danelectro Cool Cat, Daddy-O, Surf n Turf (where do they get those names?).
A few years back I met a very nice lady named Michelle Penn who is an Indy recording artist with five CDs to her credit. She sang and played two or three guitar parts on the CDs. We would often sit around and discuss different equipment and she kept referring to something called a Pod that she used for recording. I was clueless.
I then decided to record my own music just for fun so I picked up a Boss BR864 digital recorder with about a hundred different built-in effects. I then recorded a ten song CD with three to five tracks on each song. By using the built-in effects I recorded all the tracks (including bass tracks) using the same acous/elec guitar. I didn't have speakers for the recorder so I used headphones.
Like I said, I'm not a techy but I had a lot of fun with this project and can now see that all of this new equipment gives someone endless possibilities when it comes to their personal music.
BTW...I recently picked up the Jimi Hendrix Signature pedal by Digitech. It's pretty hi-tech for me but I plan on spending more time with it (not to sound like,or to cover Hendrix but just to see what all it can do). |
Plenty of people have a different approach to how they write and record music, which I think is totally cool and it's interesting to hear that despite you being "technologically challenged" that you used a digital recorder. I'm 20 years old and I think I'm fairly open minded to trying out and embracing new things. I play a 7 string guitar for example. Despite Ibanez releasing the first readily available 7 string in 1990, 19 years later people are still afraid to try them out. Others just tend to dismiss them entirely and one reason for many has been because various nu metal bands were commonly seen with them causing many people to believe they were purely for just simple, low down riffs, but that is absolutely ridiculous because at the end of the day, it's just a guitar, it still has the other 6 strings of any normal 6 string guitar. If I wanted a guitar to tune down to B, I'd buy a six string and tune that down lower, but what I wanted was 7 strings to increase my range. You can keep dimissing it, or you can do as I did, and discover that a 7 string guitar opens up a world of new possibilties with more extended chord options, arpeggios, soloing possibilties and just in general is allowing me to do things that were impossible on a 6 string guitar. Same thing applies to an 8 string, 9 string guitar or even beyond that. They are just tools for making music, just as a Line 6 POD, Boss GT, Digitech GSP1101 or an actual amp. At any time they get in the way of making music, it's because of the user, not the gear itself, despite what Debrewguy might think. I've heard so many great sound clips and songs made with amp modeling gear that I think it's easy to see the actual song writing and recording process gets done rather well if someone puts their mind it, gets off their ass and just goes for it.
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GaryB
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Posted: June 01 2009 at 20:05 |
As you know, Boss puts a whole lot into a small package. The BR864 is about the size of a laptop computer but has 8 tracks with 64 virtual tracks, a drum machine, looping, bouncing, auto punch-in/out, mixing, mastering, individual track EQ, etc. Someone with a little bit of experience could really do a lot with it. In recording my CD I probably used only 20% of this machine's capability.
The down side for me was having to bounce all the tracks down to two in order to use the USB port to transfer the songs to my computer to burn a CD.
I have no common sense when it comes to spending money. So, I picked up a ZOOM MRS-1608 with a built-in CD burner. It is a 16 track but can record 8 tracks simultaneously without bouncing. I have not used this yet but I'm working on some songs and plan to have an 8 to 10 song CD by the end of the summer.
Making my own CDs is for my own enjoyment. I give copies to family and friends if they want them.
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