Thank you kindly, bröther... definitely wouldn’t mind doing that! It’s really nothing crazy, and I think the biggest help for me recently has been having a pro reference track to compare to since my ears will adapt to whatever I’m working on, which can eventually lead to bad mix decisions if I don’t have a reference to keep me on track
@@clinttustin thx dude, as always great tip and i'm looking forward for this kind of video! You are the next big thing in music world on youtube, i'm 100% sure, u'll see!
may you please describe your recording chain ? With both LePou plugins + (same) IR i get only weak crunchy sound without lowend ... what is the secret? Thank you!
Juli Lillepea i forget what guitar I used for this, but it’s just into an apogee quartet interface (input set to instrument mode). Make sure you have enough input gain on your interface. Try doing some low palm mute chugs and bring up the gain till it’s just under clipping. Hope that helps
Yea, saw someone else comment that. Bummer! The STL Tones IGNITE is a better free alternative I discovered shortly after making this vid, so check that out.
Aradhya Khurana if you had to use this for bass, I would use your bass DI for the low end portion of the tone & and then use the cab IR signal for the “amp” mid-high portion. Definitely could get a good tone with that approach
This tutorial is out of date now since the Lepou site is no longer up. If you want a relatively easy approach to good recorded tone, get a cheap interface used or new (like a Focusrite Scarlet 2i2 or Apogee Duet), then pick up an ampsim from Neural DSP (like maybe the Archtype Nolly). If you want to go the free route on ampsim, there is one called Emissary by STL Tones. Maybe I'll do an updated tutorial with that.