Boss IR-2?

To add to Aceman's statement of this being around a while, let's go back even further. Hysteria was recording using Rockman's direct to the board.

I'm using an ampless setup every Saturday and Sunday morning for worship group rehearsal/service. I'm ampless at home when I practice using Amplitube on my Mac with a Focusrite Scarlett Solo interface. My amp gets used at my cover band's live shows and that's it, or when I'm doing a gear check a day or so before a show. I use an amp that's already in our rehearsal space when we are rehearsing.

If it sounds good, it is good.
 
Yeah, in the 80's everyone started sounding the same when they started having those refridgerator sized racks built with all the digital preamps delays, etc. I guess it's a viscious cycle... and as stated, the producers and engineers wanted everyone to sound like(insert famous 80s band name).
 
Sounds like this may be the ticket for me then. Don't really need one now, I don't know enough people in my new area yet to form a band, but I will need one eventually.
 
And I wouldn't mind never having to listen to another Tube Screamer > 5150/Recto > v30 again. Does it work? Evidently. Is it interesting? Hell no.

That's the problem with 10s of thousands of guitarists chasing the same tone instead of finding their own.
 
That's the problem with 10s of thousands of guitarists chasing the same tone instead of finding their own.

You could say the same thing about people buying a Boss pedal with a handful of amp and cab models and going direct instead of exploring the infinity of little differences that come from actually miking a cab in a room.
 
I think we as guitarists generally overemphasize the "sound" part of "finding your own sound". Very little of a guitar players sound comes from their gear, but rather how they play it. Kurt Cobain was wonderful at this. You could put that man on anything and it would still sound like him.

Trying to find circuits that make a sound you like is one thing, but you can't buy a stairway to heaven.
 
You could say the same thing about people buying a Boss pedal with a handful of amp and cab models and going direct instead of exploring the infinity of little differences that come from actually miking a cab in a room.

Absolutely. It really is a problem. That's why so few bands are unique.
 
I think we as guitarists generally overemphasize the "sound" part of "finding your own sound". Very little of a guitar players sound comes from their gear, but rather how they play it. Kurt Cobain was wonderful at this. You could put that man on anything and it would still sound like him.

Trying to find circuits that make a sound you like is one thing, but you can't buy a stairway to heaven.

That's why I'm perpetually perplexed by Ola Englunds ability to make any piece of gear sound like the aforementioned TS into Peavey 5150. At this point, I'm fairly certain you could hand the man 1960's Rickenbacker 12-string and the broken $30 early 90's solid state combo i keep in the back of my closet and it would still sound like a TS into a 5150.
 
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