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22 Aug 2018
Reamp for a Perfect Tone
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How To
Reamp for a Perfect Tone
Getting a good guitar tone is easy; settling on the perfect tone is impossible until you can hear it in the context of the mix. A popular adage with recording is “garbage in – garbage out”, implying that you’re doomed if you mess up the tracking process – but what if there’s a way around this?
The solution: Reamping.
As the name implies, it’s where you take a pre-recorded track and “re-amplify” it back through a speaker to achieve a tone that properly suits the song. It sounds arduous and time-consuming, but bear with me here: this process will actually save you tons of time and revolutionise the sound of your music.
We’ve all been there: you get the inspiration to record a riff or song idea, but end up spending unnecessary time tweaking your amp, setting up mics etc. By the time you’re ready to record you’re more focused on the tone than the music itself. Worst of all, the sounds you capture don’t work in the context of the final mix!
By simply placing a DI Box between your guitar and your pedals or amp, you can preserve an unaffected guitar performance that might end up saving you having to re-record the part over again.
Reamping lets you:
• Not worry about recording a bad tone.
• Focus on performing.
• Open up a world of creativity.
Best of all, reamping isn’t just for guitarists. It was first used by bassists and the concept can apply to any audio clip you might have.
Let’s get started!
Step 1: Capturing a track for reamping
To get the best results when reamping, you need a crystal-clear recording of the instrument. The best way to do this is to use an active direct box such as the Radial J48. Rather than plugging directly into your interface, using an active DI has many benefits. The J48 tends to add more “air” to the sound of direct instruments by preserving high frequencies that sometimes get lost when using low-quality circuitry.
Instead of your interface receiving an instrument-level signal, a DI will send the signal at mic-level, allowing your interface’s preamp to do all of the heavy lifting.
By using a DI box such as the J48, you can also still connect to your favourite pedals, amps and microphones using the “thru” output. Thus, you will record two tracks simultaneously: one clean DI track and one effected guitar track. This lets you record with the tone you’re used to while also giving yourself options in the future.
Step 2: Reamp the track and capture it again
So now you’ve finished tracking all the instruments and you’re mixing, you notice somewhere along the way your heavily distorted amp stopped sounding good in this song. No worries! It’s time to put that nice clean DI track to use. In your DAW, set the output of the DI track to a separate output (i.e. Output 3 if your monitors are connected to Output 1 & 2).
Now connect this separate output into a Reamp box. This step is often missed when people are reamping, but is crucial to getting professional results. A Reamp box converts the balanced line level signal of your interface into an unbalanced instrument level signal with the proper impedance to be sent through guitar effects.
Now send the signal from the Reamper into whatever gear you have laying around the house and record it as you would have originally. A helpful tip is to loop the track as you’re reamping – allowing you to adjust tone knobs, effect pedals and mic placement to get that “sweet spot” before hitting record.
Reamping Vocals
Not just for guitars either, try sending a vocal track into an amp or a Tonebone Classic-V9 to add tube warmth and grit. Take it a step further by sending your kick drum to a wah pedal. There are no limits! Remember, the reamping process takes practice and you’re not going to be a reamping God overnight!
Note: If you only have a 2×2 (2 inputs, 2 outputs) interface, Reamping is still possible. You will need to record, listen back, tweak, and record again. We recommend using an interface with more than 2 outputs so you can monitor the reamped track in real-time.
For introductory reamping, the ProRMP is a passive solution with a simple gain knob and ground lift switch. The original John Cuniberti design is preserved in the Reamp JCR with a custom wound transformer. Our most popular reamper, the active X-Amp allows users to send two reamp tracks at once for extreme experimentation. If you are a 500 series user, the X-Amp 500 module is available.
Conclusion
So, there you have it! Reamping not only saves you (and other musicians’) time, it reduces stress and makes it possible to dial in the perfect tones when it matters most.
Additional benefits of Reamping are:
• Improving sounds – Do you have a boring vocal track that needs some energy, or a software instrument that isn’t fooling anyone? Give them some dirt by sending the sounds through a distortion pedal, or give them life by reamping into an actual acoustic space.
• Unique sounds – With all of the plugin presets available today, reamping lets you shape tones in ways that will be completely unique to your gear, microphones and the room you record in! All of these small factors add up to give your music personality.
• Easier to edit – Compare the transients of a distorted audio track to that of the DI track. While the distorted track turns into a compressed sausage that makes it impossible to see when notes start and end, a DI track lets you see the Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release of every note.
• Bleeding Audio – Recording a band live off the floor? Then you probably don’t want noisy guitar amps bleeding into your drum mics. Keep the guitarists and bassist happy with a DI such as the JDX Direct-Drive that simulates a real amp’s tone.
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This article first appeared in CX Magazine August 2018 – print and online. CX Magazine is Australia and New Zealand’s only publication dedicated to entertainment technology news and issues. Read all editions for free or search our archive www.cxnetwork.com.au
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