cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar

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Rain
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 12:12:13 (permalink)
MakeShift


Excellent audio example Danny.  The sustain and feel is exactly what I have always felt was missing from the sims....along with a little fizz.  Using a hardware POD 2 seemed to always have better feel and sustain than the sims.

I don't currently have a hardware compressor, but I am wondering if an Art Tube Pre, TS808, or boost pedal might do something similar.  I am going to have to give this a try now over the weekend.

I'd give it a try.


Before I bought the compressor, the word that always came to mind was "density" - that's what all amp sims seem to lack. I guess it also accounts for sustain, as demonstrated by Danny's exemple.


There's something happening when you plug a guitar into an amp - the sound doesn't just get louder and more distorted, it builds up, it grows teeth, giving it that little something - almost like a 200 lbs rotweiller pulling at the end of its chain - the sound wants out.

Amp sims just don't do that. The distortion and eq'ing is all there but they miss that little spark that ignites the whole thing. 

The POD has it's own shortcomings IMHO, but it isn't really plagued by this particular one as you've noticed.

post edited by Rain - 2012/08/03 12:14:08

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Starise
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 13:34:15 (permalink)
 Great example Danny. I'm not really sure what the difference is between amp simms and something like the Line 6 HD500 when it comes to compression. They both are software programs inside hardware and both have compression built into them. You have me curious to make a comparison between the compressor in the HD500 and an outboard compressor. I know when I push the compression button in it things seem to push better.

 I guess what I'm trying to say is I'm wondering if  the compressors in those types of units will get the same results. TC Helicon also has analog compression built into the Nova line which may fare better than a digital compressor in the HD500. What I understand you to be saying is that  outboard analog compression is superior to the digital compression and maybe even the compression built into dedicated digital guitar boxes.

 Without getting into too much technical and too far over my head I'm just trying to understand why one type of compression works and the other type doesn't seem to work as well. If they are both compressors they should do the same things or very similar. Or no?

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#32
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 14:07:56 (permalink)
Can't tell about the Pod HD because I've never worked w/ it.

One thing though - while we were in Russia, I had to rely on software exclusively. I cut a few guitar oriented tracks, and had an awful time trying to nail the lead lines. Not that I didn't have sufficient gain - I was running the signal as hot as I could w/o clipping. But the sound just fell apart.

After 3 months of that regimen, I started doubting my "talent" as a guitar player, seriously. I thought I'd just lost it or something. Man, I know guys cutting records w/ much less experience and dare I say adequate playing and it works, so I was really getting depressed. I couldn't figure out what was wrong w/ my playing.

Then when we arrived here I thought I'd give those lines a try again using the POD. That was the biggest ego boost I had in a long time. lol I wasn't all that happy w/ the actual sound of the old POD, but my playing didn't fall apart - it stood up right there. Notwithstanding the sound, the performance were, at last, acceptable. Whereas, even w/ POD Farm, which should "sound" pretty similar to the POD, it never really worked. Even w/ a virtual compressor in the signal chain.

Next step was to take advantage of the fact that we were back in NY and to finally grab a compressor. It's set up so that it doesn't boost the signal at all. 

Unlike Danny, my signal goes to the preamp first (M-Audio DMP3, which is a cool no frills and absolutely clean preamp) then to the compressor then to my audio interface. 

I'm using the compressor fairly moderately, w/ a ratio of 1.5:1 max - it usually doesn't go beyond 3db of compression max on the very loudest parts. I tried a few different setting but ended up just sticking w/ OverEasy Mode and Auto (DBX). So what goes into the amp sim isn't any louder - but it is shaped more like an amped guitar sound than a clean unprocessed signal. And the amp sims seem to be happier when you feed them something like that. Otherwise, imho, they always sound like a dry guitar track w/ distortion on top - they can't add what's not there. The signal is lifeless, the amp sim gives you back a distorted lifeless signal. Frequency-wise, everything is there, but it's the dynamics that lack...

I then proceeded to give a spin to all my software amp sim - and it was like a revelation. It cleared up a whole lot of uncertainties I had in regards to which works for what. 

Now, I'm guessing that it could sound even better w/ an Avalon preamp and a fancy expensive compressor and some Apogee converters. But TBH, I'm already quite happy w/ the sound I get out of my humble set up. It's, imho, totally acceptable. The big difference is that we prime the signal before it reaches the converters - as long as it's not noisy or obviously degrading your sound, it's all good.

post edited by Rain - 2012/08/03 14:30:03

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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 18:52:27 (permalink)
Starise
What I understand you to be saying is that outboard analog compression is superior to the digital compression and maybe even the compression built into dedicated digital guitar boxes.

 
Well I wouldn't say "superior" but I'd say they are a bit more adequate for what *I* was trying to do with this. That said, in the example I provided, a digital compressor was used within the rack unit I was using. The key is how it processed the signal before it hit the amp sim. The best example is when I play the legato riff with no compression and then WITH compression. You can hear how the notes are smoother and also ring out better while maintaining sustain better than without the compressor.

Starise
Without getting into too much technical and too far over my head I'm just trying to understand why one type of compression works and the other type doesn't seem to work as well. If they are both compressors they should do the same things or very similar. Or no?


Any type of compressor will work...but it MUST be inserted into the chain BEFORE it hits the amp sim and must be done in real time and used destructively. I'm at my studio now and I'm going to try a few things using my UAD plugs just to see if they add any difference. This morning as I was working on that mp3 example though, I tested the Sonitus compressor, Sonar X1 4k bus comp, the pc 76 and the pc 2A and all 4 failed to give me the results I was looking for.

I tried them with my input ehco "on" hoping they would enhance the signal. They did enhance, but it was not the same as a compressor or some sort of stomp box working the actual signal BEFORE it hits the amp sim.

I remember having a discussion with a few of the Bakers asking them if it they could make it possible for us to process VST plugs destructively so we could use them like hardware gear. I was pretty much told that there's no reason to do that because you can process the exact same way AFTER you've recorded. The two Bakers that responded to me are 2 guys I highly respect...however, I still can't agree with them because when we process with hardware or any other type of signal manipulation device, it is literally doing something to the signal coming in.

This is why people use hardware gear. It colors, boosts, alters, and does "something" BEFORE it prints to disc that we cannot get AFTER it's been printed to disc. Even if someone showed me scientific proof that post processing is the same, I still cannot buy into it. That's not because I'm stubborn or set in my ways...it's because *I* hear a difference in a signal that is manipulated at the line source when processed before disc that is not the same after disc print. Though it all may be true on paper and in theory...I don't hear it that way at all and most importantly, the "feel" thing we get out of these devices are totally gone.

If I record into an LA2A hardware piece and print it to disc, that signal is altered and effects how I play...what my touch is...the feeling is totally different. Now try it with a software 2A and you'll see it simply is not the same. Something happens when that signal is conditioned/process pre-print that makes an incredible difference to "me". Even if you use some sort of digitial processor pre-print, it is still going to do something to the signal going in that allows it to react differently, understand what I mean now? It's all about the feel, color and the way things react. I'm not getting that same thing recording with ITB effects in the "use them live in real time" environment. Even though it's supposed to be the same....it sure doesn't sound it to me.

Rain
Unlike Danny, my signal goes to the preamp first (M-Audio DMP3, which is a cool no frills and absolutely clean preamp) then to the compressor then to my audio interface.


Actually mine goes to a preamp too, Rain. I send to either a Mackie 32x8 or the Tascam DM 4800. When using them, I don't ever drive the pre's in either board...I just get things to where I average -6dB and don't use any eq or anything. I have two ways I do things...both being about the same.

The first way is, on my guitar tube pre (Digitech 2101) I plug my guitar in and it has 2 XLR outs that go into my console. When the 2101 is in bypass mode, nothing is active and it is just a basic DI box which is what you heard in my example. In the Mackie at my house, I have a Behringer Multi-Com compressor (4 comps in one rack box) and 2 DBX compressors. I usually use one or the other for amp sim type stuff, but wanted to try this comp that was in this little rack piece which worked just as well.

The other way I do this is to use a real DI box and then have compressors at my disposal via patch bay or the Behringer/DBX which are wired to the inserts of 6 channels in my board. I don't notice any difference between the 2101 DI and the DI boxes I use.

Totally agree with your last sentence in your post as that's how I look at it and treat things myself. :)

-Danny
post edited by Danny Danzi - 2012/08/03 18:54:06

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#34
IK Obi
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 20:15:18 (permalink)
Some great tips in this thread, I always high pass everything except bass. Sometimes even drums and kick.
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Rain
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 20:55:06 (permalink)
I remembered you mentioning the 2101 in a similar thread last year - just didn't remember exactly how you use it. I figured there must be some kind of DI device in the chain. Thanks for the clarification. :)

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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/03 21:10:15 (permalink)
Danny Danzi


Any type of compressor will work...but it MUST be inserted into the chain BEFORE it hits the amp sim and must be done in real time and used destructively. I'm at my studio now and I'm going to try a few things using my UAD plugs just to see if they add any difference. This morning as I was working on that mp3 example though, I tested the Sonitus compressor, Sonar X1 4k bus comp, the pc 76 and the pc 2A and all 4 failed to give me the results I was looking for.

Exactly what I did last summer - it kinda gave me a hint that I was probably looking in the right direction but no plug-in really worked. We don't have UAD, but I've tried pretty much all the others I have. I'll be curious to read how your experimentations turned out. If it works, it might help me sell the idea of adding a UAD to our set-up to my wife. ;)

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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/05 03:06:21 (permalink)
I have amplitube and I tend to agree with the OP. I had to make a hard cut at about 200 on my distortion tracks. On clean, I found amplitube to sound too solid state and stale, so I miked my supersonic for those parts.  Great amp. Software has a certain fake sound that I can pick up by ear...   But I still use it for some parts and practice especially.

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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/05 14:24:28 (permalink)
Really? what amps are you using for Distortion? I usually high pass til around 100ish depending on the mix and the tone.
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/05 22:50:41 (permalink)
 Thanks Danny and Rain for your detailed descriptions here. Maybe the reason that I haven't noticed an extreme difference is because I am using a fireastudio tube interface. If you are not familiar with it, it has a limiter and a tube front end. The adjustable limiter must be pushing the signal pretty well. I am  using a Variax and the entire concept of that guitar is different than the input of the typical guitar. It tends to run a little hotter and cleaner than a non active pickup would. One isn't necessarily better than the other just a different animal.The output seems to be closer to what an active pickup would be.

 Thanks for posting your example Danny.

 This is what I like about this forum. People like Danny post examples to show you what is actually happening.

 I am kind of on the fence regarding amp sims. I have  computer sims,outboards boxes and so on and I think a sim can be made to sound just as good as a real amp if set up correctly,but I haven't been half as far around the block as some others who have used the other stuff either.. If adding a little compression improves it great! And Danny is using a fairly inexpensive compressor.You might even be able to get away with the compressor built into some of the mixers like Yamaha. Either way it won't cost a lot to get one.

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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/06 03:50:52 (permalink)
Thanks, as always, for sharing your knowledge Danny.

I'll add my 1 cent on this

If you can plug your guitar into a nice preamp prior to going to the amp sim, it can make a big difference.  I'm using the UA LA-610 MKII.  It takes some of the piercing qualities out of the amp sim.  The compressor on it is wonderful and can also help shape the sound before going in.


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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/06 08:21:14 (permalink)

Hi Danny,
 I thought that initial legato riff you played at the beginning really showed off your chops as a player. That extra space that allows us to hear your fingers working on the strings makes it sound so lively and you do it so well. The space in between the notes is where the music is happening and your sense of touch really adds to the pulse of the music... it was a very short passage... but it was groovy.
 
 I'd love to hear your playing direct through something nice like a Chandler Limited TG2 preamp. That's the one I'd choose out of the stuff I've got sitting here. I wouldn't use much lo-cut either. The TG2 seems to fatten up the lows and I think that would highlight how much control you play with.

 I think it would sound awesome to hear you playing naked like that more often.


 all the best,
mike




 edit spelling
post edited by mike_mccue - 2012/08/06 08:23:31


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Danny Danzi
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/06 08:29:35 (permalink)
Starise


 Thanks Danny and Rain for your detailed descriptions here. Maybe the reason that I haven't noticed an extreme difference is because I am using a fireastudio tube interface. If you are not familiar with it, it has a limiter and a tube front end. The adjustable limiter must be pushing the signal pretty well. I am  using a Variax and the entire concept of that guitar is different than the input of the typical guitar. It tends to run a little hotter and cleaner than a non active pickup would. One isn't necessarily better than the other just a different animal.The output seems to be closer to what an active pickup would be.

 Thanks for posting your example Danny.

 This is what I like about this forum. People like Danny post examples to show you what is actually happening.

 I am kind of on the fence regarding amp sims. I have  computer sims,outboards boxes and so on and I think a sim can be made to sound just as good as a real amp if set up correctly,but I haven't been half as far around the block as some others who have used the other stuff either.. If adding a little compression improves it great! And Danny is using a fairly inexpensive compressor.You might even be able to get away with the compressor built into some of the mixers like Yamaha. Either way it won't cost a lot to get one.

You're quite welcome Starise. I try to always show examples of something since I do so much typing. LOL! No sense being a wind-bag if I don't practice and show what I preach. LOL! :)
 
Yeah you don't really need anything special going on. I've been testing different things all weekend between job renders. Between the new ARC 2, the plug sim testing and me having to build another little live guitar rig for myself as a back-up, it's been a fun filled weekend of testing. LOL!
 
Here's what I know now though. As I mentioned, I wanted to really try and see if I could get similar results using better plugs before the sim. Unfortunately the only one that seemed to work along the lines of what I wanted was the UAD LA3A. That said, it still didn't give me what I was capable of getting using something destructively within the signal. The LA3A added some noise to the signal which is not what we want. You can get away with just about anything that conditions or slightly boosts the signal as long as it is on the signal before it hits your hard drive.
 
I tried everything I had in my UAD arsenal as well as some other plugs. Nothing touched the Behringer comp, my Drawmer, my Manley or the little stomp boxes and rack effects I had around here. Even a little pedal will work if you set the drive all the way to off and just boost the output on the pedal. If there is no noise you can try boosting the drive on the pedal a little bit. The Boss Compressor Sustainer, Boss Over-drive or the Tube Screamer work wonders in this manner along with a little outboard compression to keep things tight. Or you can get away with just the pedals or just the compressor. It all depends how you want to color or condition the signal. Just remember, we don't want to add any noise to the sim if possible. All the things I have tried that worked either added 0 audible noise or very little audible noise.
 
I know this will sound biased because I work for the company, but honest it's true. The only amp sim I was able to play through that didn't really need a boost of any kind was the Acme Bar Gig "Shred" or "Head Case" plugs. The reason being, we have what is called an "input gain" knob within our plugs. It compensates for whatever pups you are using and is like a buffer that pushes the signal before it hits our plug. It's not quite the same as a buffered amp input but it's the closest thing I've heard yet to where you can "feel" the amp sim like you would an amp. A mild compressor here and you're golden...but even without it, it's 100% better than any other amp sim I have ever tried....and we have them all due to comparisson and testing purposes.
 
So just try a little something on your signal before it hits the sim. It will make a world of difference. Whether it be a hardware comp, a stomp box, some rack effect compressor or boost type effect...or even an eq with the output turned up so it boosts (remember doing that years ago for lead solos? Jump on the eq pedal for a boost! Hahaha!) and you'll notice the "feel" come back into the sim as well as the sustain. From there if you turn up a bit, it should even feed back. :)
 
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/06 09:13:54 (permalink)
Since my budget...HAH!!..is minimal around here I've taken to using the Acme Bargig ampsims a lot more lately...and I have seen a bit of a difference with how this operates as well. 

By the way...who am I going to blame for buying this?







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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/06 09:15:47 (permalink)
mike_mccue


Hi Danny,
I thought that initial legato riff you played at the beginning really showed off your chops as a player. That extra space that allows us to hear your fingers working on the strings makes it sound so lively and you do it so well. The space in between the notes is where the music is happening and your sense of touch really adds to the pulse of the music... it was a very short passage... but it was groovy.

I'd love to hear your playing direct through something nice like a Chandler Limited TG2 preamp. That's the one I'd choose out of the stuff I've got sitting here. I wouldn't use much lo-cut either. The TG2 seems to fatten up the lows and I think that would highlight how much control you play with.

I think it would sound awesome to hear you playing naked like that more often.


all the best,
mike




edit spelling

Thank you Mike, that's very kind of you. Yeah for a nice, clean DI tone, I prefer the one without the compressor on it believe it or not. Though I do like to compress my DI tones a little, I'd not use anywhere near the amount you heard on the example I played with that little compressor turned on. But for use with over-drive in a sim, it's nice when we have a bit more sustain in place of drive in those sim plugs. They kill us with distortion capabilities, but the sustain is never there...so that's why I've been talking about the whole compression before the sim thing. I can actually use less distortion in a sim when I drive a comp or a little stomp box before the signal hits the disc.
 
I have a Chandler Tube driver around here somewhere....I know it's not the same as the TG2. I've heard good things about the TG2 from others and one of my friends swears by it. I've never been a fan of the tones he gets from it though because he's one of those cats that uses a bit too much 200 Hz in his tone...you know...that super smooth type thing. It's cool, but sounds a bit too congested and sort of flat to me. I know that pre can do more than that....but he's the only one I know that has one and he loves it.
 
I actually do quite a bit of low gain or "soft clipped" stuff for clients when I play on their stuff. I don't mind that sound at all and do enjoy the results. When I try it on my stuff though....well, it just doesn't seem powerful enough for what I do. I like a more processed tone. Not because it hides anything or is easier to play with, it's just a personal preference of mine. But I'd have no problems using a more naked tone for something if it called for it.
 
This is still far away from what you're talking about as far as naked goes, but I was in a little competition a few months ago on a site when they had a Lenny Kravitz "Are you Gonna Go My Way" contest. I was sort of looking for an older sound on this...sort of 60's in timbre but modern in the actual tone. So what I did was, I used a little bit of my guitar pre-amp and pumped up a little drive using my Drawmer tube comp to saturate the tone. You'll hear the saturation kick in on certain notes/chords where it just grabs that vintage "old" break-up. Still not as naked as what would like to hear me do...but this didn't have any processing on it at all compared to how I normally run my tone. This was just my guitar pre-amp using light drive and the Dramwer took care of the rest.
 
I'm playing both rhythm guitars and the lead. No clue where the backing came from...it was supplied from the site. Sounds like it may have come off of Guitar Hero or something...but it was pretty cool. https://dl.dropbox.com/u/4909348/Are%20you%20Gonna%20-%20Danny%20Danzi.mp3
 
The rhythm tones were speaker sim out of my guitar pre into my console because I wanted them a bit more up front sounding. The lead solo was my Greenback cab mic'd with a 57 and a 421 I believe...or maybe a Royer. I know the 57 was there for sure as I always use at least one of those to get a little sparkle. I believe this may have been the 421 though. But I did the same thing here. A little guitar pre-amp gain and then the saturation from the Drawmer tube comp. I know...still too driven for what you want to hear...lol...but this is actually a far cry away from my usual tone...even though no matter what tone I use, I'm stuck sounding like me....it's both a blessing and a curse. LOL!
 
Funny story real quick. I have back up rigs that I bring with me on my gigs. My main back up rig is having problems right now. My tube pre-amp is shutting off and on all by itself. So I have another guitar pre that I used to use years ago. I love it but it doesn't have a 12AX7 front end and I really prefer that. But this other thing was all I had until I can get my tube pre fixed. I set it up and started playing around with it. I recorded something with it and had old takes using the tube pre already in the project.
 
One of my interns stopped over yesterday and was hanging out with me and he says "dude, I can't tell the difference between that and the other pre. You still sound like you!" In this situation, that's a good thing...lol...but in other situations where I really want to change things up and try to accommodate for a particular situation, sounding like "me" isn't a good thing at all. LOL!
 
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Re:cutting low freq when DI'ing guitar 2012/08/10 12:54:30 (permalink)
I own a fender supersonic, also I own amplitube.   I have observed that the amp sim of the supersonic in no way, shape or form sounds like the real amp on any setting I could adjust. 

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