Messages | Version française |



? | Home page | Tutorial | Mixing in practice | Rhythm guitars

Site de Grebz
Home page



RHYTHM GUITARS

Reminder: we are working on the song Life, an original composition of mine:


(mp3 file)

Life features two rhythm guitars playing different parts. The first guitar is panned to the left and the other to the right. Both guitars were recorded using a Fender Stratocaster plugged directly into an M-Audio AudioBuddy preamp, which was connected to an Edirol FA-101 audio interface. I didn't use a real guitar amp with microphones. Everything was done using amp and cabinet simulation plugins along with various effects plugins.

Here is the complete list of plugins used for the first rhythm guitar:
* Tube Saturator by Wave Arts, a vacuum tube saturation simulation
* Urrth by Simple VST, a free guitar amp simulator
* LeCab 2 by Poulin, a free impulse response (IR) loader for my cabinet impulses
* Orange PPC412 cabinet impulses from the RedWirez BigBox paid collection ($9 USD per cab, with volume discounts)
* WizooVerb by Wizoo, a software reverb
* TrackPlug by Wave Arts, a parametric equalizer

Here is the complete list of plugins used for the second rhythm guitar:
* Tube Saturator by Wave Arts, a vacuum tube saturation simulation
* Hybrit by Poulin, a free guitar amp simulator
* LeCab 2 by Poulin, a free impulse response (IR) loader for my cabinet impulses
* Vox AC30 Blues cabinet impulses from the RedWirez BigBox paid collection ($9 USD per cab, with volume discounts)
* WizooVerb by Wizoo, a software reverb
* TrackPlug by Wave Arts, a parametric equalizer

And finally, one last plugin applied to the bus where the sound of both guitars—previously processed separately—comes together:
* FinalPlug by Wave Arts, a limiter

For any paid plugins, I will suggest free alternatives you can use instead.

Rhythm Guitar Track 1 - Rhythm Guitar Track 2 - Rhythm Guitar Bus

We will now take a detailed look at the plugin settings on the tracks and the bus for both guitars.

Mixing in practice : Preparing the session | Bass | Drums | Rhythm guitars | Lead guitars | Synths | Vocals | Mastering
Haut de page

RHYTHM GUITAR 1

Raw sound - Tube Saturation - Amp Head Simulator - Cabinet Simulator - Reverb - Equalization

Mono audio track
Panning: 90% left. Therefore, the sound of rhythm guitar 1 will be heard almost exclusively on the left side.
Volume: variable because I applied volume automation. From measure 1 to measure 11, the track volume goes from +4.5 dB to +3.5 dB following a linear curve. From measure 11 to measure 13, I applied a fast exponential curve descending to 0 dB. The track volume then remains constant at 0 dB. I did this because the recording level of the guitar at the beginning of the song was very low. Rather than re-recording this part, I preferred to use automation to adapt the volume to the mix's needs.
Life - Rhythm guitar 1 volume automation
Rhythm guitar 1 volume automation

The plugins used are chained in this order: tube saturation, amp head simulator, cabinet simulator, reverb, parametric equalizer.

Rhythm Guitar 1 Raw Sound

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 before applying any processing


(mp3 file)

Obviously, as it is, the sound isn't very pleasant! It's just the direct sound of the electric guitar, so we're going to run it through various plugins to turn it into something more interesting.

Tube Saturation

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 processed with tube saturation


(mp3 file)

At this stage, it's simply a direct-recorded guitar with added saturation. It still needs to go through an amp!

Here I'm using a plugin to add saturation to the sound, specifically tube saturation. It's not a distortion or overdrive pedal, but it warms up the sound nicely. I used Wave Arts' Tube Saturator.
Since this is a paid plugin, you can replace it with Tube Amp, a free equivalent from Voxengo that provides the same type of tube saturation. Even if the settings differ, you can achieve a similar tone.

Here are the settings used with the Wave Arts Tube Saturator plugin:

- "EQ" is enabled (otherwise, "Bass," "Mid," and "Treble" functions are inactive)

- "Bass" is set to the minimum to attenuate low frequencies as much as possible

- "Mid" is set to 4 o'clock to help the guitar sound stand out

- "Treble" is at 11 o'clock to slightly decrease the high-end level

- "Drive" is set to 2 o'clock for a relatively warm saturation

- "Fat" is enabled. This allows for a higher level of saturation when turned on.

- "Output" is set to 12 o'clock. This is the output level, adjusted so the peak signal doesn't exceed 0 dB.

Tube Saturator Plugin
Tube Saturator Plugin
Tube Amp Plugin
A free equivalent: Voxengo's Tube Amp plugin.
The settings shown here provide nearly the same sound as Tube Saturator.

Amp Head Simulator

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 going through saturation and an amp head simulator


(mp3 file)

As with real hardware, this sound isn't enough on its own; we'll need to run the signal through a cabinet.

After the saturation plugin, I add an amp head simulator. To keep a light tone, I chose the Urrth plugin by Simple VST, a free amp simulator that produces nice clean sounds. It can be downloaded here.

Here are the settings used with the Simple VST Urrth plugin:

- "Drive" is cranked to the maximum. This is a gain knob: the more you increase it, the more both volume and distortion increase. However, even at max, the distortion remains quite light, adding to the saturation from the Tube Saturator plugin placed just before it.

- "B" (bass) is set to the minimum. I'm looking to remove as much low-end as possible from this guitar to leave those frequencies for instruments that need them more in this mix. The goal here is to have light rhythm guitars in a higher register.

- "M" (mid) is at 10 o'clock to slightly lower the mids produced by this amp. The sound tends to become muffled quickly when I try to increase the mid-level with this plugin.

- "T" (treble) remains centered. More is too much, less is not enough!

- "Master" is the amp's master volume. I leave it centered and adjust the volume directly on the bus. Since this amp simulator has a rather high output level, even with the volume centered, I have to set the bus volume to -33 dB to avoid clipping!

- To complete the sound of this amp simulator, we still need to add a cabinet simulator.
Urrth Plugin
Urrth Plugin

Cabinet Simulator

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 going through saturation, an amp head simulator, and a cabinet


(mp3 file)

This sound could stand on its own, but it's very dry. We still need to add a bit of reverb.

As with real hardware, we now need to connect the amp head (simulated by the Urrth plugin) to a cabinet. We'll use the free LeCab 2 plugin by Poulin, into which we'll load impulses. Impulses are "sonic fingerprints" of real cabinets. LeCab 2 allows you to load up to 6 impulses simultaneously. I only used 2 impulses for rhythm guitar 1, so the screenshot below only shows 2 of the 6 available slots. If you want to download free impulses, you can find some on this page of my site, though they are a bit unorganized... feel free to browse for what interests you or find others on the web.

Here are the settings used with the Poulin LeCab 2 plugin:

- I used RedWirez impulses, a high-quality paid collection. Specifically, I used impulses from an Orange PPC412 cabinet equipped with Celestion V30 speakers (the real model costs around €800 and weighs nearly 50 kg!).

- First impulse:

- I chose an impulse taken at the speaker's cap edge with a Royer R-121 mic placed 4" from the grill.

- "Phase": Norm (normal). You can choose normal or inverted phase. This helps eliminate phase issues between different impulses, or when combined with "delay," can produce special effects based on the interaction between impulses.

- "Delay": 0 ms. This knob delays the playback of the sound using this impulse (between 0 and 4.6 ms). I don't need it here, so I left it at 0 ms.

- "HighPass": 183 Hz. I set this parameter to attenuate all frequencies below 183 Hz.

- "LowPass": Off. This knob attenuates high frequencies above the chosen frequency. I'm not concerned with it here, so I didn't enable it.

- "Pan": 100% left

- "Volume": set to 1, the maximum value.

- Second impulse:

- I chose an impulse taken at the cap edge with a Shure SM57 mic placed 4" from the grill.

- "Phase": Norm

- "Delay": 0 ms

- "HighPass": 183 Hz

- "LowPass": Off

- "Pan": 80% left

- "Volume": 1

- The blend of these two impulses makes up the sound of rhythm guitar 1.
LeCab 2 Plugin
LeCab 2 Plugin

Reverb

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 processed with reverb.
You can only hear the effect of the reverb itself here.


(mp3 file)

I then set this reverb to 25% to achieve the effect I'm looking for.

Now that our rhythm guitar 1 has passed through saturation, an amp head, and a cabinet, we'll add some "air" with a reverb plugin so the sound doesn't feel too confined. I used the WizooVerb plugin, which hasn't been sold for a few years but still sounds great. You can still find it in the darker corners of the internet (I don't condone it, but do as you wish), or you can use other paid or free reverb plugins. They are easy to find, and I suggest a few on this page. I commonly use SIR Convolution, which works with impulses just like cabinet simulators. But instead of cabinet impulses, you use room impulses recorded in various locations (from bathrooms to cathedrals, concert halls, or rooms in a house).

Here are the settings used with the Wizoo WizooVerb plugin:

- I used the Large Studio preset (a large multi-purpose recording studio). I reduced its "size" to 30% to avoid making it sound like it was recorded in an enormous room. The reverb time is set to 1.2s, and I adjusted the "Width" parameters so the reverb spreads in stereo. However, since the bus panning is set to 90% left, the reverb only spreads on the left side.

- The reverb amount is controlled with the "DryWet" knob. At 0%, you hear no reverb at all; at 100%, you only hear the reverb and no dry sound. For rhythm guitar 1, it's set to 25%.

- Using reverb on a guitar is common. The dosage is a matter of personal preference, but too much reverb pushes the instrument away and drowns it in the mix.
WizooVerb Plugin
WizooVerb Plugin

Equalization

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 1 processed with saturation, amp, cabinet, and reverb (in that order) before equalization...


(mp3 file)


And after equalization:


(mp3 file)

The sound of rhythm guitar 1 will then be sent to the Rhythm Guitar bus, where it will join rhythm guitar 2.

Now that the sound of rhythm guitar 1 is complete, it still needs to be sculpted to fit perfectly into the mix. I used Wave Arts' TrackPlug, an excellent paid parametric EQ plugin. As a replacement, you can use Cockos ReaEQ, a free parametric equalizer that allows you to equalize the sound in almost the same way, though it is slightly less feature-rich for certain tasks.

Here are the settings used with the Wave Arts TrackPlug plugin:

- I used a brickwall filter at 200 Hz to completely cut all low frequencies below this value. This simply reinforces what was done previously: bass at minimum on the Tube Saturator and Urrth amp, and the HighPass set to 183 Hz on LeCab 2. A quick look at a frequency analyzer (see screenshot below) confirms that nothing passes below 200 Hz. It's radical, but intentional.

- I placed a HighPass band at 350 Hz (orange dot) to begin rolling off low frequencies starting at this value. You can see in the screenshot that the volume decreases to about -10 dB before the brickwall sharply cuts the sound at 200 Hz.

- On the other hand, I very slightly boosted 5 KHz by 1.5 dB with a 2-octave width to bring out the guitar's brightness. There's no need to boost more here, as it would have made the sound too harsh and aggressive.

- No compression is applied to this guitar for now. A slight boost will be added using a limiter on the Rhythm Guitar bus.
TrackPlug Plugin
TrackPlug Plugin
Rhythm guitar 1 frequencies
Rhythm guitar 1 frequencies
Mixing in practice : Preparing the session | Bass | Drums | Rhythm guitars | Lead guitars | Synths | Vocals | Mastering
Haut de page

RHYTHM GUITAR 2

Raw sound - Amp Head Simulator - Cabinet Simulator - Reverb - Equalization

Mono audio track
Panning: 90% right
Volume: variable because I applied volume automation. From measure 1 to measure 11, the track volume is at -9 dB. From measure 11 to measure 13, I applied a slow exponential curve rising to 0 dB. The track volume then remains constant at 0 dB. The goal here is to produce a volume swell to create tension and act as a lead-in. Heads up: the intro is ending, and something new is about to happen!
Life - Rhythm guitar 2 volume automation
Rhythm guitar 2 volume automation

The plugins used are chained in this order: amp head simulator, cabinet simulator, reverb, parametric equalizer.

Rhythm Guitar 2 Raw Sound

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 2 before applying any processing


(mp3 file)

As with Rhythm Guitar 1, here is the direct sound of the electric guitar, which we will run through various plugins to turn it into something more interesting.

Amp Head Simulator

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 2 going through an amp head simulator


(mp3 file)

As with real hardware, this sound isn't enough on its own; we'll need to run the signal through a cabinet.

I'm adding an amp head simulator. I chose the Hybrit plugin by Poulin, which produces a very British vintage sound. The tone has more crunch than Rhythm Guitar 1, and their sonic characters complement each other well. It can be downloaded here.

Here are the settings used with the Poulin Hybrit plugin:

- "input" is set to maximum. This is the level of the signal entering the amp head.

- "PLS/MCJ": PLS. This switch allows for two different types of tones. They represent the two channels of the amp, with varying levels of distortion.

- "MCJ boost": intended for the MCJ channel. It is, of course, not enabled here since I chose the PLS channel.

- "Drive": set to 12 o'clock. This is the distortion level.

- "50/50 PLS Mix": set to 12 o'clock. This is a general tone setting, ranging from bass (which I find a bit dull) to treble (too aggressive for my taste if pushed to the max).

- "Cont" (contour): set to maximum. This knob affects the other EQ knobs: "Low", "Mid", and "High". The higher you turn it, the more influence the EQ settings will have. Conversely, the lower it is, the less impact the EQ settings will have.

- "Low" (bass) is set to the minimum. I'm looking to remove as much low-end as possible from this guitar to leave those frequencies for instruments that need them more in this mix. The goal here is to have light rhythm guitars in a higher register.

- "Mid" is at 3, to slightly lower the mids.

- "High" (treble) is at 8, for better clarity.

- "Power Amp": set to maximum. This is the gain level, which adds more or less saturation to the sound.

- "Master Volume": set to maximum. This is the amp's general volume knob.

- To complete the sound of this amp simulator, a cabinet simulator must be added.
Hybrit Plugin
Hybrit Plugin
Hybrit Plugin
Hybrit Plugin

Cabinet Simulator

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 2 going through an amp head simulator and a cabinet


(mp3 file)

This sound could stand on its own, but it's very dry. We still need to add a bit of reverb.

As with real hardware, we now need to connect the amp head (simulated by the Hybrit plugin) to a cabinet. We'll use the free LeCab 2 plugin by Poulin, into which we'll load impulses. Impulses are "sonic fingerprints" of real cabinets. LeCab 2 allows you to load up to 6 impulses simultaneously. I only used 2 impulses for the guitar, so the screenshot below only shows 2 of the 6 available slots. If you want to download free impulses, you can find some on this page of my site, though they are a bit unorganized... feel free to browse for what interests you or find others on the web.

Here are the settings used with the Poulin LeCab 2 plugin:

- I used RedWirez impulses, a high-quality paid collection. For rhythm guitar 2, I used impulses from a Vox AC30 Blues cabinet equipped with Celestion Alnico Blues speakers (the real model costs around €1,200 and weighs over 30 kg!).

- First impulse:

- I chose an impulse taken at the speaker's cap edge with a Royer R-121 mic placed 4" from the grill.

- "Phase": Norm (normal). You can choose normal or inverted phase. This helps eliminate phase issues between different impulses, or when combined with "delay," can produce special effects based on the interaction between impulses.

- "Delay": 0 ms. This knob delays the playback of the sound using this impulse (between 0 and 4.6 ms). I don't need it here, so I left it at 0 ms.

- "HighPass": 143 Hz. I set this parameter to attenuate all frequencies below 143 Hz.

- "LowPass": Off. This knob attenuates high frequencies above the chosen frequency. I'm not concerned with it here, so I didn't enable it.

- "Pan": 100% right

- "Volume": set to 1, the maximum value.

- Second impulse:

- I chose an impulse taken at the speaker's cap with a Shure SM57 mic placed against the grill.

- "Phase": Norm

- "Delay": 0 ms

- "HighPass": 143 Hz

- "LowPass": Off

- "Pan": 80% right

- "Volume": 1

- The blend of these two impulses makes up the sound of rhythm guitar 2.
LeCab 2 Plugin
LeCab 2 Plugin

Reverb

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 2 processed with reverb.
You can only hear the effect of the reverb itself here.


(mp3 file)

I then set this reverb to 25% to achieve the effect I'm looking for.

Now that our rhythm guitar 2 has passed through an amp head and a cabinet, we'll add some "air" with a reverb plugin so the sound doesn't feel too confined. I used the WizooVerb plugin, which hasn't been sold for a few years but still sounds great. You can still find it in the darker corners of the internet (I don't condone it, but do as you wish), or you can use other paid or free reverb plugins. They are easy to find, and I suggest a few on this page. I commonly use SIR Convolution, which works with impulses just like cabinet simulators. But instead of cabinet impulses, you use room impulses recorded in various locations (from bathrooms to cathedrals, concert halls, or rooms in a house).

Here are the settings used with the Wizoo WizooVerb plugin:

- I used the Large Studio preset (a large multi-purpose recording studio). I reduced its "size" to 30% to avoid making it sound like it was recorded in an enormous room. The reverb time is set to 1.2s, and I adjusted the "Width" parameters so the reverb spreads in stereo. However, since the track panning is set to 90% right, the reverb only spreads on the right side.

- The reverb amount is controlled with the "DryWet" knob. At 0%, you hear no reverb at all; at 100%, you only hear the reverb and no dry sound. For rhythm guitar 2, it's set to 25%.

- Using reverb on a guitar is common. The dosage is a matter of personal preference, but too much reverb pushes the instrument away and drowns it in the mix.
WizooVerb Plugin
WizooVerb Plugin

Equalization

Here is the sound of rhythm guitar 2 processed with an amp, a cabinet, and reverb (in that order) before equalization...


(mp3 file)


And after equalization


(mp3 file)

The sound of rhythm guitar 2 will then be sent to the Rhythm Guitar bus, where it will join rhythm guitar 1.

Now that the sound of rhythm guitar 2 is complete, it still needs to be sculpted to fit into the mix. For this track, I used Wave Arts' TrackPlug, an excellent paid EQ plugin. As an alternative, you can download Cockos ReaEQ, a free parametric equalizer that allows you to equalize the sound in nearly the same way, though it is slightly less comprehensive for certain adjustments.

Here are the settings used with the Wave Arts TrackPlug plugin:

- Unlike rhythm guitar 1, no brickwall was used here. Therefore, the low frequencies aren't cut as sharply.

- I placed a HighPass band at 300 Hz (red dot) to begin rolling off low frequencies starting at this value. You can see in the frequency analyzer screenshot below that the volume drops quickly below this frequency and fades out completely around 140 Hz.

- I boosted 6.6 KHz by 3 dB to better bring out the guitar's brightness. A larger increase would have made the sound too harsh and aggressive.

- No compression is applied to this guitar for now. A slight boost will be added using a limiter on the Rhythm Guitar bus.
TrackPlug Plugin
TrackPlug Plugin
Rhythm guitar 2 frequencies
Rhythm guitar 2 frequencies
Mixing in practice : Preparing the session | Bass | Drums | Rhythm guitars | Lead guitars | Synths | Vocals | Mastering
Haut de page

RHYTHM GUITARS BUS

Here is the sound of the two rhythm guitars without the limiter...


(mp3 file)


And with the limiter


(mp3 file)

This stereo bus is where the signals from both rhythm guitar tracks meet. Here, I am using Wave Arts' FinalPlug, a paid brickwall limiter plugin used to boost the sound and make the guitars more present in the track. A brickwall limiter is a type of compressor that prevents the signal from exceeding a set level. If poorly adjusted (with too much compression), it can crush the sound and even cause distortion. Properly set, it simply adds more "punch" to the audio it is applied to. As an alternative, you can use George Yohng's W1 Limiter (shown here with the BetaBugsAudio interface), an excellent free limiter available for download here.

Here are the settings used with the Wave Arts FinalPlug plugin:

- "Threshold": -2 dB. The threshold is the level at which the compression is triggered to boost the signal. The -2 dB value chosen here is quite subtle, only boosting the signal by a maximum of 2 dB. The free Classic Master Limiter plugin offers only this single setting, allowing you to adjust the threshold between -20 and 0 dB.

- "Ceiling": 0 dB. The ceiling is the level that the sound cannot exceed. In this case, all sounds reaching within 2 dB of the maximum volume allowed by the bus are increased by 2 dB and cannot surpass this value. The 0 dB ceiling value actually corresponds to the volume of the bus (or track) where the plugin is placed. Here, the bus volume is set to -10 dB, so the actual threshold is -12 dB, and the actual ceiling is -10 dB.

- The rhythm guitar sound is now final for the mix. It will only be modified during the final mastering stage.
Finalplug Plugin
Finalplug Plugin
W1 Limiter Plugin
W1 Limiter Plugin
Mixing in practice : Preparing the session | Bass | Drums | Rhythm guitars | Lead guitars | Synths | Vocals | Mastering
Haut de page
Top of page


MESSAGES

(leave a message)

Messages page # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35



marco
le 08/01/2012 à 23h31

Super site, merci pour tout ce travail, j'y vois enfin plus clair dans le monde de la MAO, et merci pour tous les sons des amplis. J'ai un son de guitare qui tue !!!



grohl
le 03/01/2012 à 22h22

Salut grebz,

Tout d'abord bravo pour ton site.
Je te contacte en fait parce que j'ai plusieurs questions à te poser.
Je suis une quiche en info mais pourtant j'aimerais bien m'amuser à enregistrer mes compos via un simulateur d'ampli.
J'ai téléchargé Kuassa amplifikation lite et le souci c'est que je n'ai aucun son qui sort quand je branche ma guitare sur le PC.
En matos, je n'ai pas grand chose, j'ai testé comme ça avec mon PC portable et sa carte son avec ma gratte branché en direct et mon casque audio basique mais qui fait le boulot.
Première question:
mon matos et mes branchements correspondent-ils ?
Si non, que me conseilles-tu comme matos à pas cher pour que je puisse me faire plaisir ?

Je t'en remercie d'avance

A+
Grohl

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>Je manque un peu de détails mais a priori, tu n'as pas vraiment l'équipement pour jouer convenablement de la guitare sur PC via un simulateur d'ampli.

Premier point :
Kuassa est un VST, c'est à dire un plugin. Les VST ne peuvent pas être utilisés indépendamment, ils viennent se greffer sur un logiciel hôte, en général un séquenceur.
Il existe des logiciels qui ne sont pas des séquenceurs mais des "hôtes VST" qui permettent d'utiliser des VST sans séquenceur. J'en connais un gratuit, mais je ne l'ai jamais testé, donc je ne sais pas s'il fonctionne bien ou pas. Il s'appelle tout simplement VST Host : <a href="/Downloads/tutorial_homestudio/vsthost.zip">Télécharger</a> (vshost.zip, 194 Ko).
S'il marche, très bien, cela épargne l'achat et l'utilisation des séquenceurs, qui sont quand même un peu complexes pour ceux qui n'ont pas envie de se prendre la tête et qui veulent simplement pouvoir jouer. En revanche pour s'enregistrer, l'utilisation d'un séquenceur devient indispensable.
Voir ma <a href="musique_homestudio_tutorial_required_3.php" target="_blanck">page sur les séquenceurs</a> pour se faire une idée.
Comme dit sur la question précédente, je conseille d'essayer Reaper pour diverses raisons. Fiable et peu cher, tout en gardant en tête qu'un séquenceur n'est pas évident du tout à prendre en main quand on débute totalement. Mais c'est comme tout, si on veut vraiment, on peut et il suffit d'apprendre. Pas toujours évident, mais loin d'être insurmontable.

Deuxième point :
La carte son intégrée à l'ordinateur portable... Elle a deux défauts pour ce que tu veux en faire.

- D'abord elle n'est pas conçue pour le volume sonore très faible qu'une guitare électrique lui envoie quand tu la branches en direct. Les guitares électriques (ou électro-acoustiques... toutes celles qui se branchent, quoi) ont besoin d'une amplification, ce que la carte son intégrée à l'ordinateur n'offre pas.
Pour remédier à cela, il faut donc soit passer par un préampli (<a href="musique_homestudio_tutorial_required_2.php#preamp" target="_blanck">exemple ici</a>), soit, ce qui est bien mieux, par une véritable interface audio (<a href="musique_homestudio_tutorial_required_2.php#interface" target="_blanck">ici</a>).

- Ensuite, les cartes audio basiques provoquent de la latence, c'est à dire un délai entre le moment où l'on joue sur l'instrument et le moment où on entend le son dans le casque ou les enceintes. Et cette latence est souvent trop grande pour permettre de jouer dans de bonnes conditions (une bonne demi-seconde, ce qui est énorme).
On peut y remédier grâce à Asio4All (<a href="http://www.asio4all.com/" target="_blank">site officiel</a>), un petit logiciel qui permet de réduire fortement la latence des cartes audio de base, mais ce n'est pas l'idéal malgré tout.

La meilleure solution reste vraiment l'interface audio. Pour du matériel correct, il faut quand même compter aux alentours de 150 euros en entrée de gamme, et il ne faut pas être surpris de tomber sur des prix d'interfaces entre 300 et 1000 euros ! Oui, la MAO a malheureusement un coût.

Troisième point :
Le casque... je ne sais pas ce que c'est comme modèle, mais comme je le dis dans mon didacticiel, mixer au casque n'est pas très recommandé, sauf (et encore...) avec de très bons casques spécifiques. Bon, n'exagérons pas, on peut très bien débuter et se faire plaisir avec du matériel de base. Si vraiment ça devient une passion et qu'on veut absolument faire "aussi bien que les pros", il faudra investir dans du matériel plus complet et plus haut de gamme. Mais chaque chose en son temps et à moins d'avoir de l'argent à claquer, il est raisonnable d'être prudent (et prudent d'être raisonnable). Commence donc avec ce que tu as comme casque, l'investissement dans des enceintes de monitoring viendra plus tard.

En résumé :
<strong>Guitare -> (préampli) interface audio -> ordinateur -> séquenceur -> simulateur d'ampli -> simulateur de baffle -> casque</strong>

Grebz</em>



Gulibert
le 03/01/2012 à 21h19

Bonjour Grebz,
Très intéressant ton site, je m'en inspire pour certains achats... :-)

J'ai, en fait, une question ou "un service" à te demander. Puisque tu as de l'avance sur moi en terme de MAO.
Chansonnier et guitariste de la vieille école, si je désire être "accompagné" d'un ordinateur pour ajouter 3-4 instruments de plus à mes représentations. Est-ce que tu me suggères quand même Sonar ? Car je me suis amusé avec la version démo et bien qu'il soit puissant, je ne veux que "préparer le montage" de mes chansons, ajouter une playlist ou une banque et lancer l'accompagnement avec mon interface midi...

Merci de tes lumières sur ce sujet...

Gulibert

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>Je ne suggère pas Sonar plus qu'un autre séquenceur. Si je parle de Sonar dans mes descriptions, c'est tout simplement parce que c'est le séquenceur que j'utilise. Si j'étais utilisateur de Cubase ou ProTools, c'est d'eux que je parlerais.

Mon conseil pour ne pas dépenser trop d'argent serait d'essayer Reaper. C'est un séquenceur comparable à Sonar ou Cubase, avec ses qualités et ses défauts, mais qui permet de faire tout ce que ces deux autres séquenceurs permettent. Les fonctions ne sont pas forcément toutes identiques, l'interface est un peu différente, le nom des paramètres ne sera pas toujours le même, mais c'est grosso modo la même manière de procéder.

L'avantage de Reaper ? Son prix. On peut le télécharger et l'utiliser gratuitement sans limitation, en version 32 ou 64 bits. Comme il n'est pas bridé, et contrairement à une version démo, on a accès à toutes ses fonctions. Mais attention ! Ce n'est pas un logiciel gratuit pour autant. Si vous le téléchargez et que vous l'utilisez vraiment, pas seulement à titre d'essai, vous devez l'acheter.

Contrairement à ses concurrents, Reaper ne coûte que 60 dollars (45 euros), là où les versions complètes de sonar ou Cubase avoisinent plutôt les 400 euros ! Il existe aussi des versions light de ces derniers, aux alentours de 100 euros et ils peuvent aussi constituer une excellente solution. La différence, c'est que Reaper n'existe qu'en une seule version, complète. mais en contrepartie, Sonar et Cubase proposent plus de logiciels annexes (des synthés, des effets, etc.) fournis au moment de l'achat que Reaper. Mais comme tous ces outils complémentaires se trouvent facilement et gratuitement sur Internet, l'avantage n'est pas forcément déterminant.

Je t'encourage donc à au moins essayer Reaper, et puisque tu as déjà essayé la démo de Sonar, cela te fera un point de comparaison pour faire ton choix ensuite. Si tu as le courage, tu peux aussi essayer les démos d'autres séquenceurs comme Cubase.

Grebz</em>



Jvne
le 06/12/2011 à 12h40

Merci beaucoup Grebz, pour cette mine d'infos - sur les impulsions notamment.
Au plaisir.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>De rien !

Grebz</em>



mudy2151
le 02/12/2011 à 12h52

Un grand merci pour cette sélection VST et descriptions ainsi que les exemples audio.
Formidable.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>De rien, content que ça serve à tout le monde !

Grebz</em>

Top of page