Yes, this is more of what is am looking for. There is a vintage AC 30 at the studio. I want the engineer to mic it but also capture a direct signal off the back of the head.
The two-notes torpedo gets raved about but there has to be options just as good, perhaps without features you might not need that don’t cost as much as a whole other amp head. The Boss Waza Tube Amp Expander looks fracking awesome but again…. pricey, but it seems the intention is to replace your cabinet altogether so you only need to bring a head, cut down the freight of a 4x12 so it’s about the same price as a cabinet. The absolute best versatility is splitting to a raw guitar DI, the mic’d amp and the whole amp sound minus the speaker.
If you like the amp sound and want a different can sound to blend, you can run the captured amp to either an IR or a flat class D power amp into another cab without having to reamp the whole thing, blend the DI into a decent sim or even a whole other mic’d rig!
It can be a mixed blessing to have too many guitar sound options if you’re spending too much time tweaking but there’s no reason you can’t also use any of the above to commit to a sound and add subtle layers if you need anything extra come mix time.
It can make mixing guitar almost orchestral with different elements from different amps riding up and down. In tips and clips I posted a quick demo of a tri-amping technique (ala Jerden on AiC’s Dirt), I’ll share the whole thing soon. It’s really something to have the core sound in the middle, duck the “bass” amp and raise the “treble” amp for clarity in the speedy moments, then bring up the thumping “bass” amp track for slower, chunkier riffs.
It’s such an organic way to do things, you almost can’t consciously tell anything is changing. The faders are just subtly automated to best fit each part of the song. You can do neat things like have different compression levels for each frequency group without needing a multiband if you’re using an outboard compressor that doesn’t have that feature, no ear fatiguing EQ boosts are needed when they’re all right there.
It plays very well with broad master EQ with a nice analog unit and a few minor surgical cuts here and there. It’s my favourite way to track now. I haven’t recorded one amp alone in 9 years.