Guitar Reamping 101 HD
Equinox Project Studio: http://equinox-ps.com Learn to mix hip-hop: http://mixinghiphop.com Learn compression: http://learncompression.com Ear training: http://quiztones.com More on reamping: http://theproaudiofiles.com/re-amp/ A basic guide for reamping guitar in Pro Tools. — Transcript: Hey guys, Derek here with Equinox Project Studio. I wanted to do a quick video on guitar reamping — 101 type course. But it should also be helpful for some of you that have heard of reamping and are looking to incorporate it into your workflow. I’m gonna show you the equipment you need, but first let’s just kind of go over what reamping is. Reamping is a powerful tool for engineers because it allows engineers to play with the guitar tone and not necessarily worry about committing the tone when we are recording. We just record a direct input signal, just a dry guitar signal and you can keep that on hand in the session if you’re not happy with the guitar tone you printed or with whatever plugins you’re working with, then we can take that DI signal, we can send it out from out DAW and we can send it back into our amplifier so we can play with some new tones and find something that maybe sounds better in the mix. It just allows for more flexibility in the mix and find a tone you love and play with mic positions, different polar patterns, different amplifiers, whatever. It’s a flexible and powerful way to get good guitar tones. So you’ll need a computer, DAW of choice — we’re using Pro Tools – then you’ll need a couple of cables that may vary depending on your I/O. I like to have balanced cables if the runs are longer than 20 ft. Just to prevent adding ground hum or signal degradation. Then you’ll need a reamp box. I use the Radial Pro-RMP. Then you’ll obviously need a microphone to record the amplifier. We’ll use an SM57. If we take a look at the back of my interface, we’ve got outputs 7 & 8. So we’ll send line output number 7 from my interface into the reamp box. From output 7, the other end of that cable goes into the input of our reamp box. Then from the output of the reamp box I’m attaching an unbalanced quarter inch guitar instrument cable which is going into the front of the amp just like if you were plugging a guitar directly into the amplifier itself. Pretend I’m the client, or you, or a band, your guitar player — whoever. We’re gonna record a DI track just using a plugin in Pro Tools and I’ll show you how to send that back out to reamp and then back to Pro Tools. Here’s the first step. Let’s track a DI guitar. This guitar is going direct into the preamp to send to the instrument input. Let’s record a take and we’ll send it out for reamping. [recording guitar DI for reamping] So we recorded a DI guitar. You can see I’ve got the dry signal in Pro Tools. Straight from the guitar into the preamp into the DAW. Now we’re gonna send it to reamp. First I’ll show you what you need to do in Pro Tools to get it from A to B. In Pro Tools you can see we hav
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