linthat22 wrote:linthat22 wrote:What I find odd is that when I run my QC into my power amp and then into my 4x12, it sounds as punchy as loud as my Rocktron Chameleon. Is there something I should be listening for between the two? People have been saying the guitars get lost in the mix or come out fizzy and I would prefer to not have that happen to me.
Is it more to do with mix in a live situation or something in the frequencies?
Anyone? I'd like to know what y'all are listening for :thu:
IMHO there are 2 parts to this, the fizziness and getting lost in the mix.
The fizziness is quite simple to solve. When you run a digital amp straight into the PA you need to program high and low pass filters. A regular guitar speaker reproduces a limited range of frequencies, usually around 80hz to around 6-8khz. Digital equipment does not have these limitations so you end up getting a lot of frequencies above and below that range. And while you don't necessarily hear them while you're playing, they end up interfering with the overall sound. So setting a HPF around 80-100hz and a LPF around 8khz or lower is important when dealing with digital amps through a PA or FRFR speakers.
That said, this might not even be an issue for you since you're running your modeler through a power amp and guitar speakers and micing the cab, which will already limit the frequency range. I'd still add the filters in your presets just in case.
The issue of getting lost in the mix is more complex IMHO. Because it not about frequencies, it's about density. Analog instruments are denser than digital instruments and sit heavier in a mix. This is not limited to guitar. It also goes for drums, keys etc.
By itself, digital gear sounds fine but when mixed with analog instruments, the analog will easily overpower it.
In my experience, the solution for this is to make the analog vs digital choice global. Meaning, if you want to go digital, do it for the entire band.
Modeling for guitar and bass, synths, e-drums. That levels things out and makes the mix more uniform.
But if you're going to use modeling against a regular drum kit, as soon as the drummer starts hitting the kit, it overwhelms the digital guitar, not necessarily in volume but in weight.
Going full digital for every instrument, you end up with a mix that is lighter overall than it'd be with guitar amps and a real drum kit, but at least the mix itself is balanced.
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