RackAddict
Previous handle "Djenter"
So I'm a satisfied user in such that this rack models tube amps perfectly. I also love the effects. The reverbs and delays alone are worth the price of this afx3 rack unit. The problem is I've found myself getting away from tube amps in general to solid state because they are so much tighter to me. And it looks like my and many other's wishes to have solid state amps modeled in this is just a pipe dream. It's just not happening.
Lately I have found myself playing some of my solid state preamps into the axe fx 3 as they seem to be the amps that feel right for the type of rhythm and soloing and tone I'm into these days. But definetly not ideal for the more involved switching rig.
Right now tube amps don't do it for one of my projects whether real or modeled. It feels like some thing lags a bit and doesn't have the articulation of SS. I find tube amps just have too much thick grain all over the sound and while some of my music can certainly record with it and use it, I still feel the need for SS at the core of the main tone of a different project.
With that being said, can I please have anyone advise me on the best ways to tighten up existing amps other than the most obvious ways like reducing sag and recovery time or shaping eq before gain? And also which are the most solid state-ish amps. So I've been able to get one or two models to sound a bit more solid state-ish with parameter editing. But not quite.
With the models like the Friedman's and Splawns, mesas and marshalls it's just not possible to get it as quick and articulate as I need as there's too much going on with the sag and whatever the amps are doing to cascade all that gain stage stuff through tubes and feeding back through the sections and whatever. The Diezels are absolutely out of the question. I mean, that guy wants his gain reaching over the former wall then back again while I'm already out of the continent.
The Peaveys are a bit edgy for the type of music I'm playing which is this cosmic death metal and black-ish astral metal with some distant stuff going on too that doesn't need to be that up front or massively grainy gain in rhythm tone. As for lead tone, I'm influenced by Mithras and a few others that to no surprise live by solid state amps. I'm just blown away by their On Strange Loops album still to this day. I also happened to invest some serious amounts of money to know exactly how all the sounds on that album are produced including all the lead tones and signal chains. I even know the exact speaker year, country and cone are and what is done to the Pickups and how the effects are run.
I have some pretty good replication of some of it in the afx3 (as a reference) but there is something fundamental here missing that is the final link.
Anyways I am just about ready to record and will record either way with what I have either with my fractal or other racks into the fractal but thought this was necessary to share before I do. The FAS models, while just as good as the other models, seem to have the same sort of things going on. (A natural thing in tube amps. But to some of us players it just throws us off after a while when we improve our playing and need faster responding more articulate amps under which only solid state seems to fall. But is there some way to adjust these deep parameters so that they are less prone to feeling like they lag? Because I may have heard pretty instant tube amps in the past with some instantly saturating solid state feel to them.
Lately I have found myself playing some of my solid state preamps into the axe fx 3 as they seem to be the amps that feel right for the type of rhythm and soloing and tone I'm into these days. But definetly not ideal for the more involved switching rig.
Right now tube amps don't do it for one of my projects whether real or modeled. It feels like some thing lags a bit and doesn't have the articulation of SS. I find tube amps just have too much thick grain all over the sound and while some of my music can certainly record with it and use it, I still feel the need for SS at the core of the main tone of a different project.
With that being said, can I please have anyone advise me on the best ways to tighten up existing amps other than the most obvious ways like reducing sag and recovery time or shaping eq before gain? And also which are the most solid state-ish amps. So I've been able to get one or two models to sound a bit more solid state-ish with parameter editing. But not quite.
With the models like the Friedman's and Splawns, mesas and marshalls it's just not possible to get it as quick and articulate as I need as there's too much going on with the sag and whatever the amps are doing to cascade all that gain stage stuff through tubes and feeding back through the sections and whatever. The Diezels are absolutely out of the question. I mean, that guy wants his gain reaching over the former wall then back again while I'm already out of the continent.
The Peaveys are a bit edgy for the type of music I'm playing which is this cosmic death metal and black-ish astral metal with some distant stuff going on too that doesn't need to be that up front or massively grainy gain in rhythm tone. As for lead tone, I'm influenced by Mithras and a few others that to no surprise live by solid state amps. I'm just blown away by their On Strange Loops album still to this day. I also happened to invest some serious amounts of money to know exactly how all the sounds on that album are produced including all the lead tones and signal chains. I even know the exact speaker year, country and cone are and what is done to the Pickups and how the effects are run.
I have some pretty good replication of some of it in the afx3 (as a reference) but there is something fundamental here missing that is the final link.
Anyways I am just about ready to record and will record either way with what I have either with my fractal or other racks into the fractal but thought this was necessary to share before I do. The FAS models, while just as good as the other models, seem to have the same sort of things going on. (A natural thing in tube amps. But to some of us players it just throws us off after a while when we improve our playing and need faster responding more articulate amps under which only solid state seems to fall. But is there some way to adjust these deep parameters so that they are less prone to feeling like they lag? Because I may have heard pretty instant tube amps in the past with some instantly saturating solid state feel to them.
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