So I’m a guitarist that has produce some beats in reason I’m trying to play live shows with a DJ mostly latin house dubstep. The sound that I’m getting is like the guitar is at a bar playing rock and the dj is a club playing electronic music.
I was told to process both intruments at a laptop so they blend together correctly.
I was thinking to maybe run the guitar thru reason for effects.
Any Ideas, Tips or suggestions will help.
Thanks
Ofir
running a guitar signal through a laptop, is hit or miss. You will lose alot of that “overdriven guitar sound”. Guitar signal is really made to be processed analog. I recommend running out from your pedals right into the mixer.
True on both accounts. As a long-time guitarist, I can say that running a guitar direct into a laptop usually makes it sound like ass, assuming you’re not using an amp modeler and just have a cable going from the guitar output to the computer line in.
My advice would be to either run it into the mixer with an amp modeler in between to act as a preamp, or mic the speaker cab. Running through a bunch of pedals and then into the mixer will work, but guitar preamps are unique for a reason, in that they are designed specifically to color the sound a specific way, hence why a Mesa sounds different than a Peavey. Mixer preamps are designed to replicate the sound as accurately as possible, and coloring is generally looked upon as being unfavorable. Some sort of guitar preamp should be utilized (either via amp modeler, mic the cab, or running a direct out from the amp if available).
That said, I feel your pain in regards to the two different sounds coming out very differently. The two tones often go together like oil and water. I’ve experimented a bit just for fun, and found the really weird, industrial style tones tend to work better. Do something unorthodox with the EQs. kill your Low and High, and get a weird low-fi radio sound or something. Basically what I’m saying is, the general guidelines for getting a rockin’ guitar tone just got flipped upside down when it comes to matching it up with electronic music.
I used to have a guitarist play with my sets, we ran 2 mixers so we could both effectively pre-cue, e.g. he could get a riff going in key, I could figure out when he was ready to rock and slam him or screw around with filters and the likes.