- Waves gtr3 gx interfave for free#
- Waves gtr3 gx interfave full version#
- Waves gtr3 gx interfave pro#
- Waves gtr3 gx interfave Pc#
- Waves gtr3 gx interfave plus#
If you're after synth sounds there are better options for free that don't charge you to download them again after 6 months have passed. Their instruments I found fairly middling aside from the B3 and Mellotron. IK is a mixed bag, some of their mixing processors are solid, MODO Bass is probably best in class for that particular niche, but MODO Drums has a great set of kicks and snares and absolutely trash cymbals. I also use Helix Native and haven't been left wanting for new guitar or bass sounds since procuring both. If you've got money to burn, a Helix Stomp is a great physical device and covers just about every tone you want before venture into pricier boxes. Alternatively, the Neural stuff is solid, a suite like Nolly would cover a good bit of ground. I'd honestly look at something like AmpHub where you can just sort of pick and choose what amps you want.
Waves gtr3 gx interfave full version#
It's usually a pretty subtle thing but it takes it that last 5% of the way to how I wanted it to sound.Īmplitube 5 was a pretty marked improvement, still a lot of 10+ year old models in the full version though. But if you drop in the TPA-1 you can tweak a lot more options and I think it just sounds better than the knob.
Like, on the HyBrit and like NaLex Crunchman (I think a Friedman emulation?) it's just 1 knob. HyBrit has some amount of power amp emulation but not all the free amp VSTs do. It's basically an emulation of a Tube Screamer into a Marshall JCM800 running a cab with some nice V30's and I paid $0.00 for it since all those plugins are free. It's a reproduction of a pretty stock metal signal chain.
Waves gtr3 gx interfave pro#
Something like: TSE 808 -> LePou HyBrit -> Ignite TPA-1 -> NadIR (with IRs from an Engl Pro 4x12). It's just not as plug and play as amplitube to do it that way.
Waves gtr3 gx interfave Pc#
On the PC in the DAW I can get results just as good or better and customize the shit out of it with free plugins. Personally if I was going to pay money for a guitar sim setup I'd probably get a physical thing like a Kemper or an Axe-FX so I can use it away from my computer for the hundreds of dollars I'm giving up. interested in your thoughts / experiences with this, thanks.It's overpriced but it sounds pretty good and it's quite easy to use. at the moment i probably won't be using more than 3 or 4 plugins on any one track anyway, but as i inevitably acquire more from waves i can see that number going up. by the way are you using the studio rack they have free for waves owners? if so is it something that helps with using waves in native situations or more of a benefit in a dsp enviroment? from what i read on the waves site it helps manage up to 8 instances of waves and some 3rd party plug ins per track by containing them in one chain, that is accessible within the track it's being used in. the Kramer tapes tubes and transistors bundle is one i have my eye on next.
Waves gtr3 gx interfave plus#
very easy to use, as you don't have to select the gear that makes up a channel, instead you just dial in the sound your after and voila you have a track that sits just right in the mix plus giving a world class sound to your whole production. i bought the Kramer Signature collection, which is 5 different plug in channels with Eddie's mix of gear and settings for each channel, they are : vocal ch, guitar ch, bass ch, drums ch, and effects ch, each have plenty of controls and such for tweaking and salting to taste. I am indeed happy with waves, Simon, and as you said with the sales and discounts they run, i'll definitely be acquiring more of their tools. i hope that doesn't come off like a paid endorsement or commercial, but Waves if you're reading i am available. i' m glad i joined the waves family of users and see myself purchasing more of their plug ins in the future. plus i really dig that you don't have to take college courses to use them, and the you tube tutorials are very helpful. i'm looking forward to delving way more deeply into all their uses in the next few weeks, but from just the skimming i've done so far they seem to offer limitless possibilities from tracking to mixdown and mastering.
and the plug ins are indeed highly stable and compatible with logic 9.
Thanks Simon, for your input, sorry i haven't posted til now, but it's been pretty hectic the last couple weeks, i went ahead and bought the Eddie Kramer bundle and the GTR 3 bundle as well, i haven't got to use them much yet, but, i agree their tech support is awesome and it's cool they're open til midnite, which makes access superb for musician's working hours.