On Sun, 2014-08-24 at 20:57 +0200, hermann meyer wrote: > Exact the answer I expected from you, and, sorry, but I haven't the > time, nor any fun in explain to you how to use guitarix, just, leave it > behind you and, do me a pleasure, delete all your guitarix stuff and > didn't talk about it anymore, PLEASE. Talk about Guitar Rig, or what > ever you use, but stop talking about stuff you didn't use nor understand > to use.
JFTR I don't use Guitar Rig, I don't use Windows or a Mac, but it does provider some nice things, such as a step sequencer for the guitar. As I already pointed out, all simulations can be used sometimes, but most of the times any elCheapo amp recorded by any elCheapo mic at disgusting low volumes sounds better. For clean guitars a Boss CS-3 and for overdrive a Boss OD-2 and a little bit of an 80th early reflection + the mixer's parametric EQ usually will do better, than Guitarix, Guitar Rig and others. IIRC Zoom was the first who introduced those emulations to the masses. Between 20 and 30 years ago Zoom released a kind of "Guitar Amp Walkman", I don't remember it's name, it was similar to what Guitarix provides nowadays. No doubt about it, Zoom, Guitarix and others are useful for some tasks, but they can not provide what they claim to provide. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
