by Lensor » 28 Sep 2010, 13:56
Hi Daniel,
I was actually saying that the rhythm guitar does not sound "electronic" to me and suggesting that it therefore probably had been recorded with a microphone. But you have proved me wrong with my supposition. I think that the GT-5 simulation sounds great though Dave doesn't seem to fully agree. Perhaps it does lack a little in natural-sounding resonance but even that can possibly be remedied with the right reverb setting or by use of a room-ambience plug-in.
The speaker sims on the GT-5 are not supposed to sound like DI-ing. They are supposed to sound like a microphone recording using a speaker cabinet. On the other hand, when I use my acoustic guitar (with piezos) for direct recording, it still sounds electronic to me.
I have the sister version of the Roland/Boss GT-5 -- the GT-3. I have not yet managed to get it sounding like an acoustic mic-recorded guitar yet though. Obviously, you would be using the Acoustic guitar simulator on the GT-5 but the EQ-ing and other settings would largely determine the sound-quality and how much it would actually sound like an acoustic guitar. I was wondering what settings you used for your simulated sound as most of these have equivalents on the GT-3. The only difference is that the speaker simulations on the GT-3 are not as flexible as on the GT-5. The pre-amp sims are roughly the same though. The GT-3 actually came out in the late 90's I think it was, after the GT-5 (the sales of this apparently disappointed Roland), and was a scaled-down more affordable version of the GT-5, as you probably realise. There is actually a single web-site for both models of which I am a member.
I hope my question makes sense. If not, I would be happy to clarify further.
Regards,
Len