+1 on that toneportTheJangus said:I've one and I think it's great for practice and has some pretty usable tones for recording. If you do want it mainly for recording though, I'd get one of these instead:
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Guitar/Recording/Gear?sku=249701
Only one guitar can be recorded by UX2 if you use the input. For 2 guitars you can mic a guitar and input one, the other choice is just micing both guitars.Rushfan2112 said:So joe, you run the guitars/bass into the toneport directly? Can you record two guitars at once with the UX2?
Yep, exactly. Not sure why you'd want two guitars at once, it's much easier to use two seperate tracks. you CAN use two microphones at the same (either in mono or in stereo, which is cool). Another cool thing about the Toneport is recording practices. We stick two microphones in the practice room and just hit record when we play songs. It's really great for hearing how a song really sounds.greendy123 said:Only one guitar can be recorded by UX2 if you use the input. For 2 guitars you can mic a guitar and input one, the other choice is just micing both guitars.
The toneport works (to my ears) exceptionally well with the SM57 we use to mic my buddy's cab, as well as my bassist's Ampeg 10inch speakers. Honestly, its probably the best investment I've made in musical gear. I love everything about it. You can even further process the sound of the miced cab, or you can set the amp model to "No Amp" and it's just the straight sound into your favorite recording program.greendy123 said:Does the guitar port work good with mics like the Sm57? I was thinking about getting a toneport eventually so I could use it as practice amp and for recording the amp I got right now.
Unless you have two seperate sends, nah I don't think you can record two tracks at once. Even still, if you and your buddy are plugged into the toneport at the same time, you'd need to be micing both of your amps, and the tone would kind of be mush. Whats wrong with recording the rythym first, and then going back and recording the lead over it on a seperate track? You'll still hear the rhythm playing while you track the lead lines over it. I'm pretty sure thats the way 99% of people do it anyways, but I'm new to recording myself.Rushfan2112 said:The only reason I ask about the two guitars is that it's a little hard for me to lay down a rhythm and then a lead. I like to have a little groove with the other guitarist. So can you record two tracks at once?
Thats good to hear, now I need decide what I want to do first replace a gt-75 speaker in my cab or get a tonepro first. Then I need to get sm57 too.joelap said:The toneport works (to my ears) exceptionally well with the SM57 we use to mic my buddy's cab, as well as my bassist's Ampeg 10inch speakers. Honestly, its probably the best investment I've made in musical gear. I love everything about it. You can even further process the sound of the miced cab, or you can set the amp model to "No Amp" and it's just the straight sound into your favorite recording program.
pac112 said:Question: the USB bypasses the soundcard rite? so for recording, its ok if i have a el-cheapo soundcard rite?