![]() The AAA 30 comes in a black buffalo styled tolex which looks the part with a red (almost oxblood) coloured grille adding to the Ashdown vintage stylings. ![]() Ashdown have also integrated their ‘Apptek’ feature which allows users to access Ashdown virtual amps and effects via the AmpKit app. Alongside the standard Volume, Bass, Middle and Treble controls there is a Line In and Headphone Out for additional connectivity. It also struck me that this could be a useful tool for people who have an electric instrument and need to practice at home while their full rig's in a rehearsal space-especially if they have roommates or family members who don't want to hear them running through their scales.Going for the smaller practice amp vibe the AAA 30 is the smallest in the lineup with a single 8” speaker and 30 watts of power. And you must use decent headphones-the bass output from these virtual amps will distort in the cheap earphones that come with your iPhone. I heard occasional clicks or pops, but adjusting various settings on the AmpliTube app (such as latency) generally fixed them. Some of the other pedals, like distortion and fuzz, were a bit one-dimensional, but would be fine for practice. I got the best results with the virtual delay pedal on my semi-electric guitar and the envelope filter on my bass. PDT July 15: I've now had a couple of weeks to play with the iRig and the AmpliTube iPhone app, and while I haven't changed my original opinion-this is a practice tool, not something for serious musical performance-I've had a lot of fun. To me at least, they sound more like fun experiments than serious musicians' tools. I suppose these apps could be useful for solo practice with headphones, casual rehearsals, or impromptu live performances-like when you're visiting friends out of town and don't have all your own gear but still want a variety of sounds to come out of your borrowed guitar and PA. But these iPhone apps don't include any recording capability, and it's not like you're going to make a serious multitrack recording on your phone anyway. There's a long history of guitar modeling software for recording- Line 6's Amp Farm plug-in for ProTools and IK Multimedia's full AmpliTube software are two examples. So will these gadgets really replace your pedal board, amp, and microphones? I doubt it. Both the app and the device will be available later this year, but Peavey is now taking preorders for the Link. To use it, you'll need Peavey's AmpKit Link, which connects your guitar to your Apple device and gives you an output for headphones, powered speakers, or a PA system. The iPhone app is called AmpKit and it will come free with one amp, two cabinets, two microphones, and three pedals you can buy additional virtual gear from within the app. Not to be outdone, Agile Partners-which has made several guitar-oriented apps for iPhone, including the highly touted Guitar Toolkit-just announced a very similar set of products, created in conjunction with music gear manufacturer Peavey. ![]() The app supports 36 presets to switch between sounds, and includes a built-in metronome and tuner. The iRig also has an 1/8-inch output that you can connect to headphones or an amplifier. Then you buy a $39.99 gadget called the iRig, which connects your guitar to your Apple device. The app comes in three versions, ranging from free to $20, with various virtual amps, speaker cabinets, "stompboxes" (pedal-based effects like delay, fuzz, and distortion), and microphones that can be combined to approximate the sounds you'd get from their real-world equivalents. Here's how it works: first, you download this app to your iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad. So I was a bit skeptical when I first heard of IK Multimedia's AmpliTube app for iPhone, which was announced last month and became available in the iTunes App Store on Wednesday. Recording geeks and live-sound engineers are even more obsessed with gear and may spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on the perfect microphone. This virtual microphone in IK Multimedia's AmpliTube iPhone app is based on the sound you'd get from an SM57-the workhorse of dynamic microphones.ĭJ and electronic music apps for the iPhone aren't much of a stretch-after all, a lot of electronic musicians have been using computers as their primary instrument since the 1990s, and the iPhone is as powerful as the highest-powered desktops from a decade ago.īut most guitarists are stubborn analog creatures, hunting vintage music shops and Craigslist for the perfect blend of amps, effects boxes, and speaker cabinets to create the sounds they want. If two data points make a trend, here's a new one: there will soon be two iPhone apps that promise to turn your humble mobile phone into a mobile electric-guitar rig, complete with multiple amps, effects, and microphones.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |