Re-Amp recording

Romain / rXg EMAIL HIDDEN
Wed Jul 21 12:46:45 CEST 2010


Tony, Andrew,

Well I was curious to do this technique for saturation on a electric guitar
...
Guitar (clean signal) --> DI --> Daw ---> Rp10 (pedal)--- > Amp
Marshall--->2 x SM57--> Daw.

I wonder about the sound  for artificial harmonics and for the saturation
gain.
What is cool imo with this technique ( if it works for me) is :

-You can have the same sound for all the guitars tracks( recorded in clean
signal) for an album ( after trying/choosing the best setting of course),

-To avoid software for saturation or distortion ( too synthetic for me ) ..

I think I will be disappointed for what I m looking for ...
But I will give it a try soon ... and of course,I will let you know  :)

Romain



On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 3:47 PM, Tony Hardie-Bick <tony at entity.net> wrote:

>  On 19/07/10 18:04, Romain / rXg wrote:
> > Just curious do you guys use sometimes the "Re-amp technique" for
> > recording ?
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re-amp
>
> Definitely. But it's even better to record with a good sound in the first
> place.
>
> Re-amping can be an excellent way of exploring amplifier sound, and also
> the
> sounds of various acoustic environments. From such experiments it becomes
> possible to understand the differences between all the various technologies
> that
> are available.
>
> Spending a week doing that will completely change your view of, for
> example,
> digital amp models.
>
> It all depends on whether you want convenience, or art :)
>
> Nietzsche is watching.
>
> Tony (HB)
> _______________________________________________
> music-bar mailing list
> music-bar at lists.music-bar.org
> http://lists.music-bar.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/music-bar
>



-- 
Romain
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