SSL make some AWESOME plugins, along with, of course, their legendary hardware, I have many of their plugs and several bits of hardware but, this is just 'Meh' though! Most people already have at least a couple of reasonable guitar amp sim plugs these days, most DAWs have one in their stock plugins. The track was rather overly simplistic too, the bass is just hilariously bad! This just sounds like it was the 'idea' of one of the bean counters rather than anyone serious. It's not worth the £20 it's on sale for currently. Come on SSL!!! you can do WAAAAAAY better than this!!!
I own many of your plugins, and mostly they are very good, however this tutorial should be re-done. Firstly, it should include all the features... HP filter and phase ignored completely, and the amp model barely shown. The user manual for guitar strip is no help. You also need to use a variety of examples - distorted guitar, clean guitar etc. in order to properly show the features. And the voice over / lack of script is atrocious. How did this pass quality control? Consider hiring someone like Dan Worrall to do your product tutorials. This did not encourage me make the decision to purchase the bass flow plugin, even on sale.
@@tekis0 plugins are used to clean up certain unwanted frequency such as muddy low end or tighten up some range. They are used for studio recording but they can't magically transform the bad tone to good tone. The characteristic of the guitar tone is the result of the guitarist, the guitar and the amp he/she uses. Here I was talking about the tone itself that this gentleman is demo-ing.
5:14 - 5:55 - Some cut the bass above 1K - Engineer Bob Clearmountain (The Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen) - Rolling Stones sound is still amazing
Bought the Plugin 35.00 (Sale) 6:56 - Bypass sounds bright and crunchy!!! vs engaged - 7:11 = Highs Muffled
Were the guitars mic'd live amps or plugins? Can you use this plugin for live recording?
Will these soon be added to the bundle of SSL plugins which we can subscribe to?
the Guitar strip has been around for years and is in the sub
Are any of these new plugins going to be available in the SSL consoles?
Will SSL native plugins be available in Harrison Mixbus 32c?
I've seen umpteen demos of the guitar strip and NOT ONE demo actually visited the phase correction module to show it works... lol
something about "auto-listen" would've been nice too.
SSL make some AWESOME plugins, along with, of course, their legendary hardware, I have many of their plugs and several bits of hardware but, this is just 'Meh' though!
Most people already have at least a couple of reasonable guitar amp sim plugs these days, most DAWs have one in their stock plugins.
The track was rather overly simplistic too, the bass is just hilariously bad!
This just sounds like it was the 'idea' of one of the bean counters rather than anyone serious. It's not worth the £20 it's on sale for currently.
Come on SSL!!! you can do WAAAAAAY better than this!!!
I own many of your plugins, and mostly they are very good, however this tutorial should be re-done. Firstly, it should include all the features... HP filter and phase ignored completely, and the amp model barely shown. The user manual for guitar strip is no help. You also need to use a variety of examples - distorted guitar, clean guitar etc. in order to properly show the features. And the voice over / lack of script is atrocious. How did this pass quality control? Consider hiring someone like Dan Worrall to do your product tutorials. This did not encourage me make the decision to purchase the bass flow plugin, even on sale.
such a horrible guitar tone
No way. If the guitar tones were "Great," then why would you use a plug-in on them?
@@tekis0 plugins are used to clean up certain unwanted frequency such as muddy low end or tighten up some range. They are used for studio recording but they can't magically transform the bad tone to good tone. The characteristic of the guitar tone is the result of the guitarist, the guitar and the amp he/she uses. Here I was talking about the tone itself that this gentleman is demo-ing.