Not really more than a day if you have any knowledge with any other DAW. Of course knowing it deeper than just basic recording, editing and mixing can be a long road. Still, in my opinion, you learn what you need very quick. Keyboard shortcuts for different tools I still never remember. I don't understand why they don't make them visible in tooltips. They have a shortcut cheat sheet available to print, but who really has a (non-3D) printer anomore? 🤣
Excellent video! and thanks for sharing the knowledge. Where can I find out how to configure IR for the guitar you use? Any video of yours or website? Thanks again.-
Like @elsonfernand said, IR is just a file that you can download or buy, and then you just load it using any IR loader. There are no other settings. Here I'm using LV2 Convolution -plugin to load a free-to-download Guitar Hacks Original Between -Impulse Response.
This is bright high-gain tone, so I have all at full. In this video I used the bridge pickup and didn't have the Sustainiac on. My tone -pontentiometer is customized to be slightly brighter when fully open than the stock Schecter C-7 FR S Apocalypse, but I doubt the difference is audible here.
@@SudoMetalStudio Thank you very much. I'm an Ardour user (on Linux) but very newbie in music production and sometimes I think I'm not "getting right at the source". It would be very useful (at least for me) a video with details like that explained so my waveforms are perfect to start mixing.
@@paulopinheiroscare You using an audio interface? Because You need the guitar in between -18 to -12 dbfs. Under the level meter You could click with right click For choose where use the meter. On the in, before and after the Fader and a personalizad that ir For use between the plugins on use. Put on un For look the entro of the signal. And later change on the output For look it You plugins are on a good level.
@@paulopinheirosc First thing to check is your levels. You can't go terribly wrong if you stay on the "yellow zone". Red zone always bad, green zone mostly too silent. One common mistake is to have your audio interface input volume/gain too high so all you get to the DAW is bad distorted signal. So check there are no "peaks" (red lights blinking) before recording. When the levels are good, you guitar tone is mostly affected by your guitar strings and their tuning. Only after that comes amps, EQs, compressors and stuff like that if even needed.
Love this in depth demonstration of not only guitar effects stack, but recording comping in Ardour! 🙌
Excellent! The fake bit made me laugh :)
Me also 😅
Great! Thank you! I'm trying to learn open-source software, so your channel is really helpful
useful piece of content, great thanks to you man!!
*hits sub button* dude that tone is great. How long did it take to get you up to speed working with ardour?
Not really more than a day if you have any knowledge with any other DAW. Of course knowing it deeper than just basic recording, editing and mixing can be a long road. Still, in my opinion, you learn what you need very quick. Keyboard shortcuts for different tools I still never remember. I don't understand why they don't make them visible in tooltips. They have a shortcut cheat sheet available to print, but who really has a (non-3D) printer anomore? 🤣
Excellent video! and thanks for sharing the knowledge.
Where can I find out how to configure IR for the guitar you use? Any video of yours or website?
Thanks again.-
No configuration needed. Load and play! 🙂
Like @elsonfernand said, IR is just a file that you can download or buy, and then you just load it using any IR loader. There are no other settings. Here I'm using LV2 Convolution -plugin to load a free-to-download Guitar Hacks Original Between -Impulse Response.
❤@@SudoMetalStudio
How do you leave the knobs of your guitar so you get the best result?
This is bright high-gain tone, so I have all at full. In this video I used the bridge pickup and didn't have the Sustainiac on. My tone -pontentiometer is customized to be slightly brighter when fully open than the stock Schecter C-7 FR S Apocalypse, but I doubt the difference is audible here.
@@SudoMetalStudio Thank you very much.
I'm an Ardour user (on Linux) but very newbie in music production and sometimes I think I'm not "getting right at the source". It would be very useful (at least for me) a video with details like that explained so my waveforms are perfect to start mixing.
@@paulopinheiroscare You using an audio interface? Because You need the guitar in between -18 to -12 dbfs. Under the level meter You could click with right click For choose where use the meter. On the in, before and after the Fader and a personalizad that ir For use between the plugins on use. Put on un For look the entro of the signal. And later change on the output For look it You plugins are on a good level.
@@paulopinheirosc First thing to check is your levels. You can't go terribly wrong if you stay on the "yellow zone". Red zone always bad, green zone mostly too silent. One common mistake is to have your audio interface input volume/gain too high so all you get to the DAW is bad distorted signal. So check there are no "peaks" (red lights blinking) before recording. When the levels are good, you guitar tone is mostly affected by your guitar strings and their tuning. Only after that comes amps, EQs, compressors and stuff like that if even needed.
@@SudoMetalStudio Ok. I was thinking about recording DI.
Should I keep guitar EQ knobs flat?