Thank You. Frankly, I have never had great success with computer plug-ins for guitar. S gear is a good one as well as The THU-Overdrive plug-ins. I have several others and really don't like things about them.Mostly they sound noisy to me and the latency is annoying. It probably has to do with not knowing how to fully use a DAW properly to dial in a guitar plug-in.The Nux Mighty Plug is amazing for the price. I've used several modellers on all of my recordings over the years. The simplest way to record the guitar for me is go directly into the Izotope Spire instead of a DAW. It's always in line and ready to go in case I get an idea. All I do is hit the button to optimize my level and hit record. It's too easy to lose a great idea any other way, for me anyway. I prefer to capture things quickly while the inspiration is fresh in the moment without dealing with a DAW to set up levels and dialing in this and that. The inspiration is gone by the time I'm ready it and it just doesn't work for me. When I'm using VST plug-ins that are anything but guitar, (synth based) then a DAW is the best way to go. It's nice to have control after you played something to dial things in.
Very nice tone how
Darrin Keaton : I pulled up a Patch and tweaked it out a bit.
It has a great app for dialing in sounds.
Is there a difference in a plug-in Amp Simm, like GTR from waves or IK media's Amplitude than The Mighty Plug? Your music sounds great.
Thank You. Frankly, I have never had great success with computer plug-ins for guitar. S gear is a good one as well as The THU-Overdrive plug-ins. I have several others and really don't like things about them.Mostly they sound noisy to me and the latency is annoying. It probably has to do with not knowing how to fully use a DAW properly to dial in a guitar plug-in.The Nux Mighty Plug is amazing for the price. I've used several modellers on all of my recordings over the years. The simplest way to record the guitar for me is go directly into the Izotope Spire instead of a DAW. It's always in line and ready to go in case I get an idea. All I do is hit the button to optimize my level and hit record. It's too easy to lose a great idea any other way, for me anyway. I prefer to capture things quickly while the inspiration is fresh in the moment without dealing with a DAW to set up levels and dialing in this and that. The inspiration is gone by the time I'm ready it and it just doesn't work for me. When I'm using VST plug-ins that are anything but guitar, (synth based) then a DAW is the best way to go. It's nice to have control after you played something to dial things in.