bart.childers wrote:The Slash JCM is weak, the Slash AFD 100 is good but a bit dark.
The Satch JVM - can’t do a thing with it.
Agreed on the Mesa Mark IV & V - just too many dang knobs and push/pull options. I am beginning to wrap my head around the IIC+ tho.
My bread-and-butter is the stock Amplitube generic “Marshalls”: Red Pig & 8000.
I gave the slashes another shot. The silver one is just so thin to me. And I'd rather use the jubilee than the gold one, since they are essentially the same thing.
Strangely, for cranked master, lower pre amp hard rock type sounds (acdc, cult, etc), I kinda liked the plain stock free 800 than the Brit 8000. Go figure.
carlaz wrote:I was going to say that I though the Brian May gear -- and presets -- were pretty convincing, even on my non-Red-Special guitar. There have been a bunch of other "official" presets for the Brian May stuff, for example from Thomas Brunkard as Peter_IK notes, though I'm not sure whether those are all now available from ToneNET.
That said, I do find that though the Brian May gear/presets sound a great deal like what's on the record, they often sound
weird to me in isolation. I have at various times tried them out, and thought "Is that what it's
really like on the record?" and then I check, and -- usually barring the substitution of my guitar and my fingers -- yeah, it
does seem to me a lot like what's on the record, but what's on the record is just weirder than what I remember in my head.
My conclusion has actually been that sounding like Brian May is a great thing for Brian May and for Queen, though perhaps not quite what I'm trying to do myself.
But I can't really fault the gear models or presets for that.
I think the Brian May stuff is too realistic, if that makes sense. It's supposed to sound thin and strangled and weird, because that's the only way you're going to layer 9000 Harmony parts. What you hear is exactly what he heard in the studio, and not what you hear on the records. Important distinction to make. Maybe if they included some more "live on stage rocking out" presets for more immediate, visceral thrills...
FrThib wrote:the mesa boogie dual rectifier, channel 3 modern.. there is so little gain. there must be something wrong in the emulation
one thing I've been doing since the beginning is cranking the input gain (the slider on the bottom left). I always felt the amps are kinda meh and needed a hot signal both to be happy and to achieve the correct amount of gain. The orange rockerverb was the most obvious example for me.
But several updates later, this doesn't seem as prevalent. I can use some amps with the input gain at zero and be happy, and that just wasn't the case before, even with clean amps. So try that. Or put an EQ pedal with the signal maxed in front and see if that corrects the gain situation with the mesas (or any weak, flat sounding amp).
They really should have addressed this on their own, though.