
midnightlaundry
Well-known member
He's got a Pedal on it and the mix is set to icepick..
if thats the case, it seems silly for us all to be here discussing what amps and gear were used on our favorite albums at nauseam if what we are hearing isnt accurate? arent albums basically just clips in the end? before i started recording i thought there were all these factors as well, but theres really not imo. if i plug my ibanez into a recto with a 57 on a v30, tune to A and record a left and right track, it sounds like Korn. plug my SG into my Laney Iommi and it sounds just like you'd think. of course id like to play an amp first, but i dont see what there is not to trust in a good review like Zen amps or some others do
It just cracks me up. There are so many posts with folks giving such strong opinions, recommendations on amps they've never heard in person...LOL! I'm not saying there aren't amazing sounding clips and sure, you can get a baseline/general idea of an amp off the good clips, but soooooo many factors in a recording and even the best clips will never give the true impression of any amp. Gotta play em IMO, period.
I can agree with this.the real answer is probably "it's subjective so 'every' way you can listen to it is the 'true' way,"
Gotta disagree with this. The way a rig sounds when mic'd up is the true impression of the rig. That is the tone. That's not "the mic'd version of the tone" that's "the tone." A guitar->amp->cab rig that's just setup in the room without a mic on it, such that you're just listening to the raw cab, is simply an incomplete rig, no different than just playing an electric guitar unplugged. What you're describing is the minimum number of pieces of equipment required to produce an audible distorted guitar signal, sure, but it's not really the rig's tone.
Don't believe me? Listen to a guitar->amp->cab setup raw in the room. Ok now move your head 6 inches in any direction and listen again. Now it sounds different. So which is the real "in the room" tone there? The answer is that there isn't one. There is no true "in the room" tone in that sense, it doesn't exist. The "in the room" tone of even just one single amp->cab rig is actually describing an entire spectrum of different sounds depending on where your head is located in space relative to the cab and the space it's in. Yes, this also means that the mic and its placement, along with whatever preamp is used, is a core part of the sound too.
It's the same with basically any instrument, ESPECIALLY in heavier music. You think any drumset used on any heavy metal album sounds anything even remotely close in the room to what it sounds like on the album? Nope.
I'm also not saying raw in the room rigs can't sound great if your head is positioned in the right place. They definitely can. I'm just saying I don't think that's a "true" representation of the rig.
Those are some steep narrow stairs!It went ass over teakettle down the stairs at the Middle East in Boston and worked just fine after!
I've never played one myself but if this was the only clip I had to go by, there's no way in hell I'd ever touch one.
Please tell me its the player and not the gear!!