Hey everyone,
Axe-Fx III user, latest update. I know the title will upset many users here, but there we go!
First off: I think the Axe-Fx sounds amazing for clean and low gain tones. But go into higher gain territories and it falls apart quite quickly.
I'm always having a very ugly, nasal sounding midrange (500 - 1500 hz) with anything in the Axe-Fx that involves high gain. Every amp has it. It's almost as if this is the sound of Fractal Audio Systems. It's not good at all though. It's not how an actual amp sounds when being mic'd, it's not how the Kemper or how many amp plugins out there sound. It's now what my 5150 or my Archon or Dual Rectifier sound through my cabs and various mics. It's really only the Axe-Fx that has it. It makes every tone sound very 2D, nasally, dark, digital and not tight. Reminds me a bit of POD Farm, but let's not be too harsh here....... ;-)
So I thought: Maybe it's just the IRs? I have about a million third party IRs though and I'm very pick with IRs - they all have that problem. So it's not really in the IRs. To make you understand what I'm talking about, here are two videos which perfectly show what I mean:
(Unit #1 is Kemper, #2 is the Axe-Fx).
(Starting at 2:50 - 1 is the Kemper and 2 is the Axe-Fx)
As you can hear: The Axe-Fx sounds super midrange-y, boxy and dark in comparison to the Kemper. Way too much though and it doesn't sit in the mix at all. The Kemper sounds like how my real amps and mic'd cabs sound like. You try to EQ that midrange out from the Axe-Fx tones, but then you took out the body and a lot of the meat of the tone. So it's not an EQ thing, it's something in the way the Axe-Fx sounds, but I'm sure it can be solved somehow, but I haven't found it out yet.
Turning down the "mids" on the amp will kill the amp's tone very quickly, so that's no option. It needs mids, but not this 800-1500 hz bark. Using the Amp EQ will kill the amp's sound as well and doesn't solve it either (I've tried it, it just scoops things and will make tones sound "hollow". Not a lot of control there anyway..). Post-EQ does the same obviously and multi-band EQ makes it sound weird and kills the dynamics as well if you start tackling the midrange. I don't understand why I need to do a ton of processing every time I try to use the Axe-Fx. It's a frustrating battle. Nothing like this happens when using the Kemper or real amp + cabs (or even plugins).
Are there any settings in the amp or in the cab block to make this midrange honk go away? I might have overseen something, who knows.
I'm more than happy to learn from experienced users who CAN help. If you're a beginner yourself or not really into the high gain modern metal type of tones, please don't try to help me (not trying to come across in a harsh way, but it's a very specific thing and it needs specific advice).
Best,
Drawn
______________________
Also, I'd love to make a few things clear, before I get "beginner tips" (sorry for that!) and before things go off-topic:
Axe-Fx III user, latest update. I know the title will upset many users here, but there we go!

First off: I think the Axe-Fx sounds amazing for clean and low gain tones. But go into higher gain territories and it falls apart quite quickly.
I'm always having a very ugly, nasal sounding midrange (500 - 1500 hz) with anything in the Axe-Fx that involves high gain. Every amp has it. It's almost as if this is the sound of Fractal Audio Systems. It's not good at all though. It's not how an actual amp sounds when being mic'd, it's not how the Kemper or how many amp plugins out there sound. It's now what my 5150 or my Archon or Dual Rectifier sound through my cabs and various mics. It's really only the Axe-Fx that has it. It makes every tone sound very 2D, nasally, dark, digital and not tight. Reminds me a bit of POD Farm, but let's not be too harsh here....... ;-)
So I thought: Maybe it's just the IRs? I have about a million third party IRs though and I'm very pick with IRs - they all have that problem. So it's not really in the IRs. To make you understand what I'm talking about, here are two videos which perfectly show what I mean:
(Unit #1 is Kemper, #2 is the Axe-Fx).
(Starting at 2:50 - 1 is the Kemper and 2 is the Axe-Fx)
As you can hear: The Axe-Fx sounds super midrange-y, boxy and dark in comparison to the Kemper. Way too much though and it doesn't sit in the mix at all. The Kemper sounds like how my real amps and mic'd cabs sound like. You try to EQ that midrange out from the Axe-Fx tones, but then you took out the body and a lot of the meat of the tone. So it's not an EQ thing, it's something in the way the Axe-Fx sounds, but I'm sure it can be solved somehow, but I haven't found it out yet.
Turning down the "mids" on the amp will kill the amp's tone very quickly, so that's no option. It needs mids, but not this 800-1500 hz bark. Using the Amp EQ will kill the amp's sound as well and doesn't solve it either (I've tried it, it just scoops things and will make tones sound "hollow". Not a lot of control there anyway..). Post-EQ does the same obviously and multi-band EQ makes it sound weird and kills the dynamics as well if you start tackling the midrange. I don't understand why I need to do a ton of processing every time I try to use the Axe-Fx. It's a frustrating battle. Nothing like this happens when using the Kemper or real amp + cabs (or even plugins).
Are there any settings in the amp or in the cab block to make this midrange honk go away? I might have overseen something, who knows.
I'm more than happy to learn from experienced users who CAN help. If you're a beginner yourself or not really into the high gain modern metal type of tones, please don't try to help me (not trying to come across in a harsh way, but it's a very specific thing and it needs specific advice).
Best,
Drawn
______________________
Also, I'd love to make a few things clear, before I get "beginner tips" (sorry for that!) and before things go off-topic:
- I do have a properly tuned and treated studio (done by a professional) with great monitoring (and headphones)
- I've been playing the guitar for 30 years and I'm more than above average and a very technical player, so it's not my playing or my guitars or pickups or whatever people come up these days

- I do have a lot of experience in mixing and mastering (I professionally run a studio)
- I don't need to hear how happy you are with your tones or that I need to use EQ. ;-P Tones have to sound right at the source - that's what every great producer and mixing engineer will tell you.
- I don't need to hear "the Axe-Fx isn't for you then". Because I truly believe it is. And I don't want a Kemper (again) - the Kemper has its own flaws. I wish I didn't sell it though.....
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