Re: Analog distortion pedal into Digital Amp modeling
Thats mainly for recording to your computer I guess? does it also have realistic distortion and reverb effects or should I use them by the end of my effect loops only for amp modeling and recording?
Or let me put other way, if I invest on such a software what kind of external pedals should I still need to buy?
I created only one little ReVaver-only demo track. I was just curious of how far I can go with it alone so there is no audio post processing. Note that it used some of the early versions of ReValver, V1.something I guess, the Peavey version is much more advanced.
If you have time to tweak it, I think you may skip adding external gear. As dominus says, you can put some nice delays, reverbs, whatever VST to improve the sound. There are a lot of usable free plug-ins, take a look:
Stillwell
Melda
Voxengo
Reaplugs
Besides improving your sound, they give you an insight of audio processing. Some of these can seriously tickle the moustache of big guns like Waves, UAD or SSL.
Back to Revalver, back in time I was in a situation like you, lived in one room with neighbours. No place for anyting louder than a sneeze. I used a PC with Sonar DAW, an Echo Audio PCI soundcard and a tiny M-Audio Studio Buddy microphone preamplifier. I plugged the preamp out of my guitar gear (a Korg G1 or a Marshall SL-X direct out) into the Studio Buddy, reorded that signal and used the power amp and cab simulation of the ReValver. Its included preamps are quite good I think but I never had the patience to tweak them as I had the Marshall and the Korg with instantly usable sounds. When I record tracks for myself (fast and unpatient), I still use a similar way, with the difference that I use the cab simulator out of one of my AMT preamps that give instantly usable sounds.
You have the BOSS now and it's power is compact size and reliability. If you carry your stuff a lot, it is a great tool. But if you keep most of your music recording at home / in the bedroom, I'd suggest using one of the common DAW softwares with an audio interface like this one:
M-Audio Fast Track
For software there are lots of options, from the freebie Audacity to the big-bulls ProTools. For starting,
Audacity is okay, it is absolutely capable of creating demos. Anyway, I'd suggest
Reaper or
Sonar because they have much more powerful song creating and editing features. These go with a longer learning curve as well but don't be afraid, you'll benefit from all of that in the long run.
As for a a serious mind opener / cracker, check
SunVox. It is vastly different experience from anything
