
Try this thing.. post a new thread that says 'YOUR ALL CUNTS!' (no image)..pfft :)
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Sat 15 Nov 2008, 3:25,
archived)


Still trying to figure out how to record off of my iAxe . . . I'm missing some sort of trick . . .

It sounds great through headphones . . . but when I record and play back, it's like unplugged . . .
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 3:36,
archived)

It sounds great through headphones . . . but when I record and play back, it's like unplugged . . .

like cubase, abelton, sonar etc.
..and record it through that.
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 3:54,
archived)
..and record it through that.

and record it on wavepad or whaterver . . . right ?
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Sat 15 Nov 2008, 4:26,
archived)

that any recording you make on the computer, will be of the unaltered guitar before the software does the clever 'make it sound like a guitar amp' stuff. This applies to just about all the software I have used.
If you can get your hands on a digital audio workstation of some description, you would need to route the signal to get it to record the effected sound.
1) Make an auxiliary input for the guitar, and use the guitar combo as an insert on that channel.
2) Route the output of that auxiliary to a bus
3) Create an audio channel to record the sound on, setting the input to the same bus.
You need to do that for any effects you want to apply to a recorded signal - compressors or limiters or EQ or whatever.
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 4:47,
archived)
If you can get your hands on a digital audio workstation of some description, you would need to route the signal to get it to record the effected sound.
1) Make an auxiliary input for the guitar, and use the guitar combo as an insert on that channel.
2) Route the output of that auxiliary to a bus
3) Create an audio channel to record the sound on, setting the input to the same bus.
You need to do that for any effects you want to apply to a recorded signal - compressors or limiters or EQ or whatever.

Will do . . . thanx a bunch !
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 4:51,
archived)

that doing it this way means you cannot change the sound once it has been recorded.
If you record the unaffected guitar, you can always put the guitar combo as an insert on that audio channel - and change the settings later if you decide you want to.
The problem with that approach, is that when you record half a dozen guitar tracks you need half a dozen instances of the guitar combo all eating up system resources.
It's always a balance between what is convenient and what your computer is capable of running.
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 4:59,
archived)
If you record the unaffected guitar, you can always put the guitar combo as an insert on that audio channel - and change the settings later if you decide you want to.
The problem with that approach, is that when you record half a dozen guitar tracks you need half a dozen instances of the guitar combo all eating up system resources.
It's always a balance between what is convenient and what your computer is capable of running.

I don't know if you've seen the iAxe . . . it's like a Strat but runs off of the USB port.
So it's actually got 3 jacks . . . USB . . . headphone and regular guitar jack.
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 5:11,
archived)
So it's actually got 3 jacks . . . USB . . . headphone and regular guitar jack.

and played it. I am sorry to say I did not like it much - it was a terrible guitar to play.
The software was excellent though - a cut down version of Guitar Rig, which has to be one of the most amazing things every created by man.
( ,
Sat 15 Nov 2008, 6:42,
archived)
The software was excellent though - a cut down version of Guitar Rig, which has to be one of the most amazing things every created by man.
