65
submitted 4 months ago by Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Prompt questions:

What do you do for work, or what are you studying towards

Musical recommendations (bonus points for metal)

Useless tidbit you know (bonus points for citing sources)

Best meal you've had

Best place you've visited

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

That was more signal chain theory that I've ever read in one sitting.

Sorry 😂. Digital signal processing is one of my special interests so I typically go overboard with it.

  • Source of distortion doesn't really matter, it's filters
  • TS808 cleans shit up, no tubes. Tubes not necessary and probably dont do much in a pedal anyway

Yep that's it.

  • What are you running now for amps and such got get away from the 5150/TS808 combo?

In the "before times", I used a TBX150 solid state amp alone, and a Peavey 6505, mostly for recording. The TBX150 is a great amp for modern death metal, but it has a parametric EQ. For me, that's great, but a lot of guitarists don't like the metal zone because it has a parametric EQ. For both, I plugged them into a cheap birch Seismic cabinet with a Vintage 30 speaker harvested from a Recto cab. Honestly, the biggest factor in the quality of my guitar recordings was switching to that speaker.

At this very moment, since my grandmother moved in, I've had to forgo amps altogether for simulators. I actually use either a 6505 simulator (Nick Crowe 8505) or a Fender Frontman (yes, that amp, specifically the AXP Softamp plugin) with the mids cranked up and the cabinet impulse thrown out and replaced with a set of impulses I recorded myself from the previously mentioned cabinet.

The best results I've gotten have been with using an EQ before a Boss HM-2 (Buzz Helvetes) set to... however much "HM-2-ness" you want in the EQ depending on what you're playing, and the smallest possible offset from zero distortion. The pre-EQ is typically a bandpass so I can get more "grinding" and as a cheat for not changing my strings. But, it doesn't really change the "overall" frequency response of the output of the HM-2, just how the HM-2 "sees" your guitar, so you still get its nastyness. Then the majority of the gain comes from the amp.

If an HM-2 or Metal Zone is too much, I've gotten really "smooth" results with using the ProCo Rat as an overdrive. Note that on a ProCo Rat, the Filter (tone) knob "is backwards"; all the way to the left = minimal filtering.

My inspiration for this is really the fact that old school death metal was recorded on shitty gear compared to what is available today, and that some of the magic lies in the fact that it sucks in just the right way. Besides At the Gates who used two shitty pedals, Chuck Schuldinger from Death used a shitty Valvestate and got great results. Most of the old school death metal bands were using Valvestates.

In the past few months, I've been experimenting with using the RS-MET tool chain plugin to generate nasty sounding distortion with odd-order Chebyshev polynomials. It initially sounds like a more unhinged Boss HM-2 with no pre or post eq, but since the plugin lets you input the math you want to do, it's much more controllable. If you use this plugin, you gotta make sure to set the built-in filters to cut off high frequencies that will be aliased, or turn on oversampling, or both. This is included within the plugin, but you have to actually set it. Otherwise, everything just sounds like aliasing, although that's pretty gnarly too.

So the short answer is: switch out a tube screamer for some garbage piece of gear, preferably something with a frequency response (loosely "tone") you like and a "bold" distortion. Then, set the pedal so it is giving the least amount of gain while still exhibiting its nonlinearity (minimum possible distortion), then set the amplifier to give you the rest of your gain and cut through the mix. I cannot stress enough that for metal guitars, particularly recording guitars, you gotta set your knobs so that it sounds good in the mix. If it sounds perfect in the room without the rest of the band, I guarantee you it will sound muddy in the mix.

[-] Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net 2 points 4 months ago

I love how into this stuff you are. It's like me cornering people and talking about soil science, geomorphology, or anything environmentally related.

I bet your setup sounds amazing since you know your shit cold. Your comments must be like nuclear bombs dropping on scrubs in persnickety guitar forums.

T O A N W O O D Z...

Mildly related, but I want to throw a creamback or something similar into my SS22, if I get time. I actually took about a 5 year hiatus from guitar because of kids. I'm starting to get back into it now though and I forgot how healthy of a habit it is for me.

[-] PM_ME_VINTAGE_30S@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I love how into this stuff you are.

Thanks, I wish people around me felt the same way 😂.

T O A N W O O D Z

So I actually found an Acoustical Society of America article on wood species for acoustic guitar by a luthier. My favorite quote was:

Provided the wood does not respond like the proverbial “piece of wet cardboard”, most luthiers can create a respectable instrument from available timber.

And tbh with enough EQ and compression before the amp I probably can get metal out of a piece of wet cardboard.

From the conclusion of the paper:

Specific woods types have specific attributes that make them best suited for making particular guitar components.

...

However, the street lore attributing specific types of sound to specific species of a genus is seldom justified.

...

Guitars designed to acoustical criteria (rather than dimensional criteria) where the effects of different stiffnesses and densities of species are minimised, sound very similar.

...

The residual differences that can be heard may be attributable to the sound spectral absorption and radiation of the particular piece of wood used, a property that is not easily measured and is poorly substituted by the occasional measurement of the damping characteristics of the wood. Once the density and Young’s modulus of particular species is accounted for by careful acoustical design the residual differences are very subtle, yet can be important enough to ensure that some luthiers continue the romantic search for that “holy grail” of woods.

I believe that some of this discussion should apply to electric guitar. However, unless you are playing basically perfectly clean electric guitar, the wood your guitar is made of is a lot less important than... everything else in the signal chain. However, since wood does affect the guitar's sensitivity, I could see it affecting how it responds to classic amps with low (relative to modern amps) distortion generated by few gain stages and less filtering, i.e. the playstyle employed by those guitar forum people. However, a much larger factor in your guitar's sound is...big surprise...all the other choices the luthier made when designing and fabricating your guitar, as well as your pickups and the signal chain you use after the signal leaves the guitar.

Also since we're metal players and we're absolutely destroying the original signal, the type of wood only makes a difference for structural reasons (i.e., not going out of tune, exploding under the pressure, etc.), which can similarly be accounted for by a competent luthier. For example, all of my guitars are uber-cheap, and their necks can be very easily pulled out of tune, because they were not built by competent luthiers. Consequently, the few times I did play live shows, I had to be very careful on stage to not "do stuff my guitar doesn't like" so it didn't go out of tune by the end of the song. Good times...

Creambacks

So I found a video where Creambacks get compared to a V30. IMO based on that video and forum posts, I would consider a Creamback H-75 over the H-65 or the Neo. H-65 sounded too dark to stand out in a mix, and the Neo sounded like bees and basically nothing like the other two. (If my guitar sounds like bees, I want it to be an effect I can turn off.) However, take it with a grain of salt since mic positions were not the same for each speaker. But also, it depends on your primary use case (recording, bedroom play, playing shows).

Although honestly, I think 99% of guitar players would get a lot farther investing in a PC with a decent CPU + a decent USB audio interface than buying actual physical amplifiers unless they need to amplify an actual venue [1]. You'd get better sound, more controllable sounds [2], easier recording, and more possibilities by going digital. Also, if you can send guitar into your computer (or run the Effects Send to your interface to test it with your real amp), it would be cheaper to pick up an impulse response of the speaker before committing to buying one. (An impulse response captures the "character" of a speaker + cabinet + power amp assuming it is a linear system. It is a very good approximation, nearly indistinguishable from the real thing. For example, I recorded several IRs of my Vintage 30 and a couple other speakers in my cabinet.)

[1] Technically you need plugins and DAW software too, but you can 100% use a combination of stock plugins and freeware and get excellent results with practice. The Ardour DAW is free and open-source (but they do charge for pre-compiled Linux binaries, but Linux package managers typically have a version ready-to-go for free), although REAPER is better IMO (not simple, but extremely customizable and stable) and has an infinite, unlimited free trial (and runs on Linux).

[2] For example, the "clean" channel on the 6505 absolutely sucks, except (ironically) as a rhythm metal channel. If I needed to use both clean and distorted sounds, I would have to use a second amp and an A-B switch. In software, it is absolutely trivial to automate the switch between two (or more) amps (or effects, or whole signal chains). ReaGate, a freeware noise gate plugin that comes with REAPER but anyone can get, includes an adjustable pre-filter so that it only responds to the frequency ranges you expect your guitar to "live in". It also has a side chain input, meaning you can gate the output signal based on the signal that goes in before the amplifier, like the "four-wire" noise gate setup in an amplifier's FX loop. This setup means that the amplifiers won't distort the signal as the gate transitions from on to off, and it also can take care of noise due solely to the distortion stages.

[-] Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net 2 points 4 months ago

I think for acoustics, wood definitely matters. For electrics? Not at all. There's a plexiglass guitar out there that sounds amazing. Hell, the first LP was legit a log.

There MIGHT be differences between solid and semi hollow electrics, but not as much as people put stock into it.

I'm just a basement player, and an ok one at that, but I am really good at dialing in tone. Like you, I could probably get toan out of a wet shoebox.

Heck, those little pignose amps were used by greats and they are stupid simple circuits.

this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2024
65 points (91.1% liked)

Asklemmy

43974 readers
627 users here now

A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions

Search asklemmy 🔍

If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!

  1. Open-ended question
  2. Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
  3. Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
  4. Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
  5. An actual topic of discussion

Looking for support?

Looking for a community?

~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS