Does anyone route theyre drummachines through a guitar amp??
Does anyone route theyre drummachines through a guitar amp??
doing a recording prject at the moment for college...
im in desparate need of some drums, but ive not drummer or kit available... so im thinking about routing my machine drum in!
anyone done this sucessfully??
im thinking maybe do it with each bit separely solo'd!!
im in desparate need of some drums, but ive not drummer or kit available... so im thinking about routing my machine drum in!
anyone done this sucessfully??
im thinking maybe do it with each bit separely solo'd!!
Re: Does anyone route theyre drummachines through a guitar a
Yep - I use all kind of outboard, including amps, when I can on drums but a personal fave is the Sansamp boxes (esp: the rackmount PSA1's). Throw a bit of kick and snare thru them and lightly mix that in with the original - & sometimes I'll throw that out of phase to drop the kick drum down an octave. Very cool soundstjohn wrote:doing a recording prject at the moment for college...
im in desparate need of some drums, but ive not drummer or kit available... so im thinking about routing my machine drum in! anyone done this sucessfully?? im thinking maybe do it with each bit separely solo'd!!

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I've heard of both nin and bjork routing all sorts of things through guitar amps including vst synths and drum machines, I may recall even hearing that beck does it but I might be mistaken about that one. I don't think they are the only ones either.
I've tried it before, routed some stuff out of live into a tiny combo that I had hid under a sink in my room (yes I actually had a bathroom sink in my room) it sounded pretty cool but my mic was too crappy to do it properly. If I ever get a proper condenser I'm totally doing it again though.
recording vst's through amps or monitors with a mic and then back into your computer is a great way to introduce accoustical environments to your mic which wouldn't normally be there and which reverbs don't usually do properly.
I've tried it before, routed some stuff out of live into a tiny combo that I had hid under a sink in my room (yes I actually had a bathroom sink in my room) it sounded pretty cool but my mic was too crappy to do it properly. If I ever get a proper condenser I'm totally doing it again though.
recording vst's through amps or monitors with a mic and then back into your computer is a great way to introduce accoustical environments to your mic which wouldn't normally be there and which reverbs don't usually do properly.
It was as if someone shook up a 6 foot can of blood soda and suddenly popped the top.
Yeah, SR16 through my Zoom effects pedal - results in some crazy distorted beats... 

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i remember reading an issue of remix where the chem bros. put teir synths through guitar amps.......
i have put a lot of sounds throgh it, once you put the signal through it, record its output then chop it on your sampler and bam, u have a sound library that only a few people knew how you got to that sound.
i have put a lot of sounds throgh it, once you put the signal through it, record its output then chop it on your sampler and bam, u have a sound library that only a few people knew how you got to that sound.
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that's a VERY common practise. In fact, if you listen to 70's funk with synth lines it's almost never d/i - everything is run through an amp and cabinet, so that it sits better with the acoustic sound sources.v00d00ppl wrote:i remember reading an issue of remix where the chem bros. put teir synths through guitar amps.......
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Re: Does anyone route theyre drummachines through a guitar a
great ideaNod wrote:Yep - I use all kind of outboard, including amps, when I can on drums but a personal fave is the Sansamp boxes (esp: the rackmount PSA1's). Throw a bit of kick and snare thru them and lightly mix that in with the original - & sometimes I'll throw that out of phase to drop the kick drum down an octave. Very cool soundstjohn wrote:doing a recording prject at the moment for college...
im in desparate need of some drums, but ive not drummer or kit available... so im thinking about routing my machine drum in! anyone done this sucessfully?? im thinking maybe do it with each bit separely solo'd!!


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Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
Live, Reason, Moog sub phatty, Moog sub 37, Ozone 6, guitars, Pedals, proper ergonomic sitting posture, french pressed coffee with a pinch of cardamon.
I've ran drums and synth lines through my PODxt pro via SPDIF........
Some MEAN sounding stuff.Plus all the fx outboard really helped, at the time i was still on a PPC powermac.
Some MEAN sounding stuff.Plus all the fx outboard really helped, at the time i was still on a PPC powermac.
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another technique is to use 2 mics.
use mic 1 to record the amped sound(drum machine, synth, etc.) close to source
use mic 2 to record ambience from another area like down the hall, across the room, etc.
now you can change the balance of the mix between the two... provided you recorded on separate tracks
use mic 1 to record the amped sound(drum machine, synth, etc.) close to source
use mic 2 to record ambience from another area like down the hall, across the room, etc.
now you can change the balance of the mix between the two... provided you recorded on separate tracks
Just be carefull. I did it once when I was playing with the band. I hooked up my ultralite on a Fender Twin Reverb. Sounded bloody well, for about 30 min. then it was over with the Fender. Broke. over and out,
Had to pay the owner for a repair. The guy at the repair shop said them speaker cant handle deep base sounds. But it sounded like hell. 


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