slashy
Inspired
The same thing for me !
And, as said above, mine shows up on the decay.
And, as said above, mine shows up on the decay.
no chime in from cliff so that makes me think he's working on it.. hang tight i'm guessing.
no chime in from cliff so that makes me think he's working on it.. hang tight i'm guessing.
There's nothing to work on. That's what amps do.
I have to ask the question; Why do we not notice it when playing through tube amps? Or, what is is about using a traditional tube amp rig that seems to filter out the "ghost fizz"?
It's this crackling sound that begins while the sound decays that many users are having questions about. It honestly almost sounds like bit reduction.
If it's not related to the modeling process or IRs, does it have anything to do with output/playback volume?
I'm not letting go of mine, but I'm hoping to find a solution.
I have to ask the question; Why do we not notice it when playing through tube amps?
That's an excellent question. There are a couple of answers that I know of; there may be more.I have to ask the question; Why do we not notice it when playing through tube amps? Or, what is is about using a traditional tube amp rig that seems to filter out the "ghost fizz"?
x1000000Because you don't put your ear up against the speaker.
That's an excellent question. There are a couple of answers that I know of; there may be more.
The first reason is that tube amps sound best when they're cranked up loud, so that's how they're usually played. You can't get cranked-amp tone from a real tube amp unless you crank it. That means hitting your ears with sound levels that are outside of the range where your ears are sensitive to nuances—you hear a lot more detail at moderate volume than you hear at loud volume. Our ears accept a lot of warts and bumps as "part of the loud." When we hear it at moderate levels, it stands out and doesn't sound normal.
The second reason is that we don't usually try to change a high-gain tone to pristine-clean with the guitar's volume knob. That doesn't work very well, partly because high-gain tones don't clean up well. Most of the distortion in a high-gain tone comes from the preamp, where the onset of distortion is fast and rude.
In other words, grab the tube amp of your choice, dial up a high-gain patch, then roll off your guitar's volume knob until the tone is completely clean. Your volume knob will be very nearly at zero, and it will be somewhere between difficult and impossible to get a sound you like.
He uses his guitar's volume to clean up his tone, but not to clean it up all the way.. Listen to Panama, for example. He rolls off when he hits the break, but it only sounds clean compared to his tone earlier in the song. There's still plenty of hair on it.EVH has been doing the guitar volume roll back to clean thing since the 70's...
He uses his guitar's volume to clean up his tone, but not to clean it up all the way.. Listen to Panama, for example. He rolls off when he hits the break, but it only sounds clean compared to his tone earlier in the song. There's still plenty of hair on it.
He uses his guitar's volume to clean up his tone, but not to clean it up all the way.. Listen to Panama, for example. He rolls off when he hits the break, but it only sounds clean compared to his tone earlier in the song. There's still plenty of hair on it.
Also at the time he was using lots of power amp distortion which tends to clean up better using the guitar knob than preamp distortion.