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Kamis, 10 Juli 2014

AmpliTube Jimi Hendrix




AmpliTube Jimi Hendrix TM is based on the AmpliTube engine. As a package it promised far more than amp models, including cabinets, some rare classic effects, different microphones, and the ultimate in time savers – Hendrix presets. Performing the review I wanted to see just how it stacked up (forgive me), how versatile both the configuration and sound were and ultimately answer the question.. would I use it for more than just fun?

Performing The Review


                           
I decided to try the stand alone version first, focusing on the sound and usability aspects of the review, moving onto running it as a VST plug in allowing me to focus on one aspect of functionality at a time.

I decided to approach my review without first reading the manual. My experience has taught me that by far the majority of users approach software this way, only turning to the manual when they hit a stumbling block. It relies on a fairly intuitive interface to be reasonably successful, so I jumped right in and noted the questions that occurred to me as a I browsed for later reference in the user manual.

Input / Output Interface

Located at the bottom of the AmpliTube window, here you can adjust your input gain, and perform basic signal conditioning using a noise gate (took me a while to find based on browsing the application before using the help system). This section also contains a selected parameter display for adjusting individual controls on selected stomp boxes or rack effects, and a preferences section.


Modules

There are 5 different sound modules:
- Tuner
- Stomp Boxes
- Amplifier
- Cabinets
- Rack Effects

A full list is provided at the end of the review.


Signal Chain

Choice of 8 preset signal chains for connecting the modules together with 2 side by side rigs that you can configure as 1 large rig, 2 simultaneous rigs, or something between the two.


Preset Manager

The preset manager allows you to load complete sound set ups covering the full Hendrix studio discography plus a variety of other common set ups and sounds. You can also create, save and load your own set ups.

Speed Trainer

Ideal for playing the original track at a reduced speed for learning a riff or entire song. You can set loop points and adjust the tempo and pitch variation.

Getting A Particular Sound

Armed with the trusty “Hey Joe” as a starting point my initial goal after connecting up my guitar was to see how easy it was to get that particular sound set up. I found the preset manager pretty quickly however my initial attempt was a bit confusing. Initially I was a bit daunted by the standard menu tree that popped up when I clicked “Preset Folder”. It was the only thing that said “preset” on the screen. A bit lost I closed that and clicked about. It took some minutes to find the interface based preset menus which was a mildly frustrating start.


Having found the menus I had no problem in finding “Hey Joe” with all the song set ups categorized by album, song and song part.

My instant reaction on playing was “Hey, that’s pretty damn good!”. Very evocative and convincing. No Fuss. I liked that.

I spent the next while navigating the presets, trying all the parts for all the songs, spending most of my time on my favorite tracks. Understandable, the sound truly is impressive. The ability to load each up with such ease somehow seemed like cheating but a most welcome cheat at that.

I didn’t have a midi wah-wah pedal to hand (or foot as the case may be) so I resorted to the auto-wah feature for tracks involving the wah-wah pedal and then to using an external wah-wah. The former provided less than spectacular results and the latter firmly place the tonal sweep at the beginning of the signal chain which was less than satisfactory. So I deferred the evaluation of these patches until I recorded in my chosen DAW.

I loaded the Hendrix CD tracks into the SpeedTrainer and played along for a more direct comparison with the tracks. There were discrepancies in the sound but considering variables outside the simulation such as the guitar used and its settings, the performer, the environment and the CD mixing/mastering it was hardly surprising. All in they were close enough to the sounds on original tracks.

After the Hendrix discography I also had a browse through a number of other typical amp set-ups provided by IK Multimedia. In general it was very easy to hear a use for these “out-the-box” presets.


Creating A Sound

I delved into dial twiddling trying out some settings of my own. I wasn’t disappointed. I could tell the difference between AmpliTube Jimi Hendrix and a real valve amp, but it is so close, some sounds particularly. A difference you are unlikely to notice in a mix. While I was more impressed with the dynamic changes in the sound than with previous amp simulators I did feel the amps still lacked some of the breadth of harmonics and the feel of the real amplifiers when they were being overdriven. It lacked that “untamed beast” quality.

I changed the amplifiers and cabinets, the signal chain, the stomp and rack effects and the microphone selection and position and saved and reloaded my customizations with no problems.

Using With A DAW

I used Sonar to perform the DAW perspective of AmpliTube Jimi Hendrix. I had no issues launching it from within Sonar. Each parameter of each effect or amp or any part of the interface can be controlled from within the DAW. In this I referred to the manual from the start.

My first port of call was to control the tone of the wah-wah pedal. I loaded the intro set up for Voodoo Chile (Slight Return) then recorded the intro as a raw unprocessed track while monitoring the sound from the amp simulator. After checking the midi assignments I drew in the wah-wah filter position in the controller window for an accompanying midi track. It did as expected sound wise and there were no real issues hooking the two together.
Interface


It looks pretty good, and in general it’s not too hard to find anything. A more integrated help system would have been nice and perhaps more clearly defined sections gathered under headings such as “Presets” would have made navigation easier. I viewed the application at 1920 x 1200 resolution and I did find navigation menus such as the preset browsing a little awkward, having to repeatedly go back a step or two to pop up the right menu when an errant mouse move took me out with the zone for that menu. For me it was too sensitive.

Models

AmpliTube Jimi Hendrix includes a range of amps typical of the makes and models used by Jimi Hendrix.

I’m most familiar with the Marshall but each amp definitely has a realistic performance characteristic of the amps and cabinets they are modeling. Impressively the models behaved like the real amplifiers across the settings spectrum.

IK Multimedia’s DSM technology really does make a difference. The Marshall was accurately responsive to the nuance of my playing. When I played with a delicate touch on the Marshall I got that nice clean tone, more aggressive playing brought out the overdriven amp sound distinctive to Marshalls.

It’s a pretty flexible system. You can combine the pre-amps and power amps and cabinets any way that you like, and the ability to have dual signal chains was interesting.

Good range of stomp boxes appropriate to the time. You can easily assign each to a different place in the stomp box signal chain. The stomp boxes were good, although I was disappointed in the wah-wah when set to auto mode. Most were fuzz pedals of one kind or another, but as it is a Hendrix set up that is to be expected.

There is an online Preset XChange where users can swap presets with each other.

It did occur to me that it would have been nice to be able to expand AmpliTube by allowing the user to buy and install individual amp/cab/effects models without having to buy further full collections. XGear does provide the ability to use the amp/cab/effects from multiple AmpliTube packages via one interface.

Tuner

A pretty straight forward tuner. I tried a few different guitars and had no real problems with the exception of when I used a “noisy” guitar.


AmpliTube Fender v1.0.VST.RTAS


IK Multimedia's AmpliTube is one of the most acclaimed software amp simulators on the market. It's been rolled out in various forms, including AmpliTube 2, Jimi Hendrix, Ampeg SVX, Metal and now the officially endorsed Fender version.

All bear the 'Powered by AmpliTube' legend, and between them they cover an impressive 38 amps, 45 cabinets, 57 pedals and 30 rack effects.

AmpliTube Fender includes 12 amps, 12 cabinets, nine microphones, six pedals and six rack effects. Like all AmpliTube products, Fender comes in both plug-in and standalone formats, the latter intended for live performance (or practice, of course).

You can choose from a number of preset routing configurations, to create, for example, dual amp setups. The standalone version also includes the rather useful SpeedTrainer audio player, which enables you to slow down tracks to aid in learning parts.
Overview

As the name implies, AmpliTube Fender only emulates Fender guitar gear. With such headline amps as Twin Reverb and Vibro-King in the pack, this is patently obvious, but the rack effects (Pitch Shift, Tape Echo, Sine Flange, Triangle Chorus, Wah and Compressor) are sourced from Fender's more recent Cyber-Twin amp, while the pedals (Blender, Phaser, Fuzz Wah, Tape Echo, Volume and '63 Reverb) are from throughout the company's history.

There are cabinets to match their respective amps (although you can mix and match) and, with the exception of the Bassman 300 and Metalhead, these are all combos. Mic emulations vary from the commonplace SM57 and U87 to the more unusual Beyer M160 ribbon and Sennheiser MD441. On- and off-axis settings and near and far positioning allow for plenty of sonic variety from the mic options alone.

IK is keen to point out that AmpliTube Fender is its most accurately modelled package to date, citing extensive use of their Dynamic Saturation Modelling (DSM) and the recreation of each and every stage of the amps and effects. The company has also developed something called Volumetric Response Modelling (VRM), which has enabled it to capture the sound of the Vibratone Rotary Speaker.

Of course, Fender has approved the sounds of the package, too. You'll also find options for activating oversampling for pedals or amps and a high-resolution mode – inevitably, these carry an accompanying CPU hit.
Amps

Clearly, AmpliTube Fender's big draw is its amp emulations. Half of these stem from Fender's rock 'n' roll hey-day and include the '59 Bassman LTD, '57 Deluxe, '64 Vibroverb Custom and '65 Deluxe Reverb, as well as the '65 Twin Reverb and Vibro-King Custom already mentioned.

The other six amps are more recent: the Champion 600, Super-Sonic, MH-500 Metalhead, Pro Junior, Bassman 300 and TBP-1 Bass Preamp.

So, if you're after the full-scale classic valve-driven sound to couple with a Strat or Tele, you've got six great choices in the older units. The other models offer broader capabilities, such as bass-specific amps. The Bassman 300 is a modern rig with graphic EQ and compression, while the TBP-1 offers a classic tube preamp with modern overdrive and EQ.

For a more contained, 'studio' sound for electric guitar, you've got the Pro Junior and Champion 600 amps, while metal maniacs should try the MH-500 Metalhead rig, which has a solid-state power amp.

Finally, Fender's recent Super-Sonic valve amp gets a look-in, although only the Burn channel is included (the Vintage channel is absent).
In use

Just dropping the plug-in onto pre-recorded guitars in a mix revealed plenty of recognisable Fender tones, from the thickness of the Bassman to the direct, punchy sound of the Champion 600 and on through the rich, creamy Twin Reverb.

Purely in amp terms, you're spoilt for choice, and while the pedal effects aren't very extensive, at least they're all good.

The fun really started for us when we used AmpliTube Fender in real time with a Stratocaster – it successfully sculpted that potentially weedy Strat tone into all manner of rich, solid and distinctive sounds.

Our favourite amp is definitely the '57 Deluxe, but each model offers something slightly different. Overall, the Metalhead impressed us the least, but by contrast, the recent Super-Sonic is brilliant.

Much like the pedals, the rack effects are only really the icing on the cake, but they're useful for certain effects, such as chorus and flanging. It is frustrating, though, that the effects are rigidly divided into pedal and rack categories – since there's no compression pedal, we'd love to be able to place the Compressor rack before the amps, but you just can't do it.

And you still can't reorder the effects, either, though if you use X-Gear (a free download for registered users) you can combine elements from different AmpliTube products to create monster rigs.

X-Gear lets you access presets for individual elements (amp, cab, pedal, rack) as well as the full rig presets, and they're all categorised by product (Jimi Hendrix, Metal, Fender, etc). There are also presets that combine modules from multiple AmpliTube titles, although you'll need to own the particular editions used in a patch to load them up.


X-Gear offers the same automation system as the regular AmpliTube: each module parameter (ie, knobs and switches of pedals/amps/effects) can be assigned to one of 16 host automation parameters.

There's also a MIDI implementation that's exclusive to X-Gear, but it only gives access to controls for preset next/ previous, stomp bypass, and volume/ wah/Wharmonator. This is pretty lacking compared to some of the competition, such as Overloud TH1, which lets you control almost any combination of parameters via MIDI CCs, and jump to specific patches.
Summary

Gripes aside, AmpliTube Fender is IK's most convincing amp sim product to date, and it can produce so many new and old tones that you really are spoilt for choice.

On the downside, CPU usage can be considerable, particularly with the high resolution and oversampling modes activated. But all told, we're enormously impressed by this package, as all it's really lacking when compared to the real thing is that physical guitar-amp-player interaction.