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Re: Free VST Amp/Speaker Simulators for Jazz?
I'll check it out, Per. Anything that references an actual amp that is a
jazz standard is good. What bugs me is when I use these amp simulators and
they appears to be designed for "rockers", showing big 4X12 speakers for
visuals, etc. I'd die for a "jazz guitarist" plugin that offered tone
simulations of the most popuar and classic jazz amps: A few original
silver
face Polytone, Roland Jazz Chorus, Fender Twin, Mesa Boogie Mark I, and a
few others.
Kris
----- Original Message -----
From: "Per Boysen" <per@boysen.se>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2006 12:31 AM
Subject: Re: Free VST Amp/Speaker Simulators for Jazz?
>I think this FreeAmpSE is the one I have played with too. If so I agree
>that it's very good!
>
> Another one that is top of the line is NI's Guitar Combo's. I had it
>for
> a while on my boxes for reviewing it in a guitar magazine, but I had to
> deactivate them afterwards. Especially the Vox sounded best to my
>taste.
> Even better for a jazz tone although NI does market the Roland Jazz
> Chorus simulation as the "jazz offer". I'm talking "tone" and "musical
> response" here, not "effect". You may always add effects afterwards in
>a
> VST chain but to me the Vox emulator from NI came out as the winner.
>Not
> free, but worth a lot more than the quite low price it sells for (I
>think
> you can buy just one of them - not having to get all three combos)
>
> per
>
>
> On 27 jan 2006, at 00.39, Art Simon wrote:
>
>> Have you checked out Free Amp SE?
>> http://207.218.248.76/~fretted/ampsims.html#FreeAmpSE
>> It sounds good to me. . .
>>
>>> Can anyone recommend a plugin that is inexpensive or free? I'm
>thinking
>>> a
>>> nice Fender Twin, Roland Jazz Chorus, or Mesa Boogie Mark I tone
>might
>>> be
>>> good.
>>>
>>> Kris
>>> www.krispenhartung.com
>>> info@krispenhartung.com
>
>