Anyone ever tried Guitar Rig 2 Software?
- Balls On Parade
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I like NIGR better than Amplitube, mainly because of the way you can combine any number of different speaker cabinet emulators with different mic'ing positions, plus the extra stompboxes are a bonus too, although I wish there were more amp heads to choose from......
But I haven't tried the 2nd version yet, I just have the original...
But I haven't tried the 2nd version yet, I just have the original...
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- Balls On Parade
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no, the stomp boxes are patches within the program itself, just like the amps, processors, cabinets, etc...you can place them anywhere in the signal chain (within the program), along with other effects, rack or stompbox...and yeah, i got it off of Soulseek with a key code generator, and it installed itself within my recording program...stoic wrote:you get it off the net? what'd the stomp box run you?
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- Metallash
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search google for Guitar Suite, its free and is modelled in the Marshall JCM900 Amps, sounds alot better than NI Guitar Rig and Amplitube, Record your Guitar clean straight into your Soundcard, then in the tracks plug-ins shove the tubescreamer plug-in in there then add the JCM900 plug-in, quality tone for free 

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- Balls On Parade
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that's nice, but sometimes you can't get the effect of the distortion in your playing, so you may play it differently clean than if you had the distortion while playing...that low latency soundcard stuff you hooked me up with a while back really does the trick, man, that ASIO4ALL stuff...so i can play through the PC in pretty much real time...Metallash wrote:search google for Guitar Suite, its free and is modelled in the Marshall JCM900 Amps, sounds alot better than NI Guitar Rig and Amplitube, Record your Guitar clean straight into your Soundcard, then in the tracks plug-ins shove the tubescreamer plug-in in there then add the JCM900 plug-in, quality tone for free
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Rainbow Randolph: I'm a little fucked up in general, so it's kind of hard to gauge!
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yea you can do that shit through cubase as well, open up cubase, create a new track then add the plug-ins to the track as you normally would while mixing, but then press the monitor button on the track and you will hear the distortion while recording.Balls On Parade wrote:that's nice, but sometimes you can't get the effect of the distortion in your playing, so you may play it differently clean than if you had the distortion while playing...that low latency soundcard stuff you hooked me up with a while back really does the trick, man, that ASIO4ALL stuff...so i can play through the PC in pretty much real time...Metallash wrote:search google for Guitar Suite, its free and is modelled in the Marshall JCM900 Amps, sounds alot better than NI Guitar Rig and Amplitube, Record your Guitar clean straight into your Soundcard, then in the tracks plug-ins shove the tubescreamer plug-in in there then add the JCM900 plug-in, quality tone for free
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- long4theblur
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How much does (decent) hardware cost to be able to record directly to your computer? Is the sound quality good?
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make sure its a Pod XT, the original Pod's are shit.croninburg wrote:Line 6 Pods will give you a completely professional sound and they go cheap second hand on ebay.long4theblur wrote:How much does (decent) hardware cost to be able to record directly to your computer? Is the sound quality good?
if you wanted some pretty good hardware and you dont have an amp i'd just get the Pod XT and a decent Soundblaster Soundcard and plug my guitar into the Pod, then plug the Pod into the soundcard on my PC, if you want to mic up your amp and get a pretty decent sound i would get an SM57 Microphone (approx. £60/$120), M-Audio Audio Buddy Pre-Amp (approx. $120) and a Soundblaster Audigy 2 Soundcard (approx. $110) and in both cases i would just steal a copy of Cubase SX from a bittorrent site, you can use your onboard soundcard if you want but it just wouldnt sound as "rich" so to speak, but it would still sound pretty decent. i use onboard sound and get pretty good results.
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Theres 3 types of Pod Xt's, theres the standard Pod XT which is the red bean shaped one, Pod XT Pro which is a rackmount version which is basically the same but with extra connecters so its better suited for a studio and theres the Pod XT Live which is the pedal board looking thing which is better suited to live use, if you are gonna be using it at home to get some recordings down just buy the standard Pod XT and maybe think about buying the Model Packs for it, especially the Metal one as it gives you a few more amps to choose from including the 5150 model which is probably the best model on the Pod for metal.
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I'm not familiar with those Line 6 or Behringer products for the PC, I like keeping my rig simple: guitar>M-Audio Mobile Pre USB>soundcard>Cubase SE with both the original NI Guitar Rig and Amplitube as plugins for bass and guitar, although I'd like to check out the newer versions of both of these softwares...I just still haven't figured out the drums plugins yet...I have a razor thin level of patience for those things...
policeman: are you alright?
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Rainbow Randolph: I'm a little fucked up in general, so it's kind of hard to gauge!
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yep, that firepod is fine, its has really good pre-amps too, it will also be useful for when you want to record drums because of the 8 inputs, the firepod connects via FireWire so make sure you have a FireWire port on your computer before buying it, if not you can buy FireWire ports for around $30-40 that slot into one of your PCI slots on your motherboard.
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- scrotal_tug
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I would definatley agree with everything here apart from the soundcard choice.Metallash wrote:make sure its a Pod XT, the original Pod's are shit.croninburg wrote:Line 6 Pods will give you a completely professional sound and they go cheap second hand on ebay.long4theblur wrote:How much does (decent) hardware cost to be able to record directly to your computer? Is the sound quality good?
if you wanted some pretty good hardware and you dont have an amp i'd just get the Pod XT and a decent Soundblaster Soundcard and plug my guitar into the Pod, then plug the Pod into the soundcard on my PC, if you want to mic up your amp and get a pretty decent sound i would get an SM57 Microphone (approx. £60/$120), M-Audio Audio Buddy Pre-Amp (approx. $120) and a Soundblaster Audigy 2 Soundcard (approx. $110) and in both cases i would just steal a copy of Cubase SX from a bittorrent site, you can use your onboard soundcard if you want but it just wouldnt sound as "rich" so to speak, but it would still sound pretty decent. i use onboard sound and get pretty good results.
I've had no personal experience with a soundblaster card, but aren't they kinda 'general purpose'?!
If that's the case, maybe an M-Audio Audiophile 24/96 (for the same price or less) would be far better.
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to be honest i didnt even think of the 24/96 haha, but yeah Soundblasters are more towards entertainment but they will do for decent enough recordings, but go for 24/96 as first choice.scrotal_tug wrote:I would definatley agree with everything here apart from the soundcard choice.Metallash wrote:make sure its a Pod XT, the original Pod's are shit.croninburg wrote:Line 6 Pods will give you a completely professional sound and they go cheap second hand on ebay.long4theblur wrote:How much does (decent) hardware cost to be able to record directly to your computer? Is the sound quality good?
if you wanted some pretty good hardware and you dont have an amp i'd just get the Pod XT and a decent Soundblaster Soundcard and plug my guitar into the Pod, then plug the Pod into the soundcard on my PC, if you want to mic up your amp and get a pretty decent sound i would get an SM57 Microphone (approx. £60/$120), M-Audio Audio Buddy Pre-Amp (approx. $120) and a Soundblaster Audigy 2 Soundcard (approx. $110) and in both cases i would just steal a copy of Cubase SX from a bittorrent site, you can use your onboard soundcard if you want but it just wouldnt sound as "rich" so to speak, but it would still sound pretty decent. i use onboard sound and get pretty good results.
I've had no personal experience with a soundblaster card, but aren't they kinda 'general purpose'?!
If that's the case, maybe an M-Audio Audiophile 24/96 (for the same price or less) would be far better.
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