Peter_IK wrote:Sounds like the only mess is what to play through first, most, and for how long!
In all fairness, Peter, I must concede to that point of view. Point taken.
Peter_IK wrote:Sounds like the only mess is what to play through first, most, and for how long!
Peter_IK wrote:This FAQ details the location of IK manuals installed: http://www.ikmultimedia.com/faq/2497
Savage1969 wrote:Peter_IK wrote:Sounds like the only mess is what to play through first, most, and for how long!
In all fairness, Peter, I must concede to that point of view. Point taken.
nevillesingular wrote:Peter_IK wrote:This FAQ details the location of IK manuals installed: http://www.ikmultimedia.com/faq/2497
Thanks, got it. I do think a breakdown of the speakers and their characteristics would be useful - even just a "based on" list. The cab list doesn't detail the speakers in every case, and certain cabs haven't carried over from A3 (like the 4x12 J120, for example - though the California Red speakers are in the list).
And I'd still love to know which version of the JCM800 has been modelled; I'm getting a pretty good Plexi tone by balancing the Master and Preamp levels, so I'm guessing it's one without the diode clipping - like a 2203 - but it's hard to be sure.
Peter_IK wrote: It was like Christmas morning x 5,000, especially compared to scrimping and saving for hardware and sometimes being left disappointed long-term with expensive purchases.
Peter_IK wrote:I wish it was my old one, but I stupidly sold that sweet 1980s "box of loud" long ago.
Peter_IK wrote: OK, I'll stop before I get into not missing razor blades to edit tape and tell people to get off my lawn.
Peter_IK wrote:Yes the looper tracks are mono.
Please report your other issue to IK support and they will happily troubleshoot and assist you directly at http://www.ikmultimedia.com/contact-support/mi/
neutronic wrote:Peter_IK wrote: It was like Christmas morning x 5,000, especially compared to scrimping and saving for hardware and sometimes being left disappointed long-term with expensive purchases.Peter_IK wrote:I wish it was my old one, but I stupidly sold that sweet 1980s "box of loud" long ago.
These two are somehow related, aren't they?
neuronic wrote:Peter_IK wrote: OK, I'll stop before I get into not missing razor blades to edit tape and tell people to get off my lawn.
I don't know... I heard today that Dave Grohl prefers that to wasting his week-ends on upgrading the software. Though if being serious, high-five on that whole post of yours, Peter! I love the tape when it's software.
Peter_IK wrote:Oh no, I sold the JCM800 around the mid-90s so a bit before AmpliTube was a thing and definitely before I got into IK stuff.
neutronic wrote:Peter_IK wrote:Oh no, I sold the JCM800 around the mid-90s so a bit before AmpliTube was a thing and definitely before I got into IK stuff.
Got it. "The link" I thought I saw between those two was - saving for gear, being underwhelmed with it, selling it, wishing to get it back. You know, the stuff we humans do. And I bet you had lots of fun in college. It sounds like fun!
Peter_IK wrote:I still LOVE hardware too but the tools we have at the price we pay today is just mind-boggling and sometimes I get a bit of shell shock when I compare to the days before these advances.
Peter_IK wrote:neutronic wrote:Peter_IK wrote:Oh no, I sold the JCM800 around the mid-90s so a bit before AmpliTube was a thing and definitely before I got into IK stuff.
Got it. "The link" I thought I saw between those two was - saving for gear, being underwhelmed with it, selling it, wishing to get it back. You know, the stuff we humans do. And I bet you had lots of fun in college. It sounds like fun!
Oh I had all kinds of fun in college, some of which I can remember and even some I can actually talk about! Seriously, though, full immersion in music was an amazing experience.
nevillesingular wrote:If you don't mind me asking, which college? I studied at Salford in the early 90s, one of the UK's first proper "popular music" courses, with studio recording as part of the curriculum. Very few of my classmates wound up making music for a living (I'm now an author!), but one did end up playing bass for Queen.
Peter_IK wrote:nevillesingular wrote:If you don't mind me asking, which college? I studied at Salford in the early 90s, one of the UK's first proper "popular music" courses, with studio recording as part of the curriculum. Very few of my classmates wound up making music for a living (I'm now an author!), but one did end up playing bass for Queen.
Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts