

I just loaded the “rhythm guitar” preset tweaking a bit the threshold, the noise disappeared. It turned out mandatory for me to add a gate at the end, Reaper’s ReaGate to be precise, because of the annoying noise coming from my SG cheap pickup, that was amplified by the VST chain. Insert them following exactly this order in your VST chain.
#REAMP IN REAPER FREE#
Let’s move forward: create a new track and insert these FREE plugins: I recorded some chords and some palm muted parts for this tutorial and, I mean, remember I’m not a guitar player, so forgive me! I use Reaper but you can apply all the concepts to whatever DAW you like.

I’m not a guitar player, not at all, I play every now and then guitar just to remember some riffs and record them quickly, with my cheap SG guitar (I bought it some years ago for about 100€ on ebay), B drop tuned with some awesome strings: RotoSound DarkZone. Moreover I use free plugin, not bad for your wallet, isn’t it? There’s no right or wrong way to do it, this is how I like to do it, keeping it the simpliest I can. Let’s start saying that this tutorial is for those guys who are starting their first studio project and who are trying to have more from their guitar sound. What more? Nothing, the problem is that you have to render it as you’re actually thinking about it. You want it aggressive, evil, distorted with great saturation and right EQ. While you’re recording your guitar during your home studio projects there’s something you want immediately right: your guitar tone. Times change and techniques improve, if you’re afraid to waste you time reading outdated posts please close this tab. There will probably be some latency, so you’ll need to move the reamp version back a few MS. I labeled output 3 in my I/O setup “Sub 1” but I don’t think that matters–it was probably just a personal naming convention. We looked up tutorials and checked the routing over and over and still got nothing.ĮDIT: I just checked my old session and this was exactly how I had it set up, so you should be fine with this. My buddy and I tried desperately to get this to work in Logic on multiple occasions and we just couldn’t. I didn’t even have a reamp box either–and there it mattered more since I was going from line to instrument.īut I was using Studio One. I’m 90% sure this is how I set it up when I reamped a guitar months and months ago… I was able to hear the new recording of the guitar through my headphones just fine. I don’t think this will cause any feedback… But I’m always weary. Now when you press play, you should hear the affected vocal track (and not the original, unless you duplicate and send to the master, which you might want to do). Make a new track in Reaper and make the input the aforementioned stereo track. Now take your MnM stereo out and plug it into two channels on your interface. But I THINK you’re going from line level to line level which means you should be fine. There might be some trickery here as in a reamp box may be desired… I’ve always been fuzzy on those details. Now take a quarter inch from output 3 and plug it into the input of the MnM. Since it’s a vocal, I assume it’s a mono signal? So take your vocal track, and tell it to be sent out through output 3 for instance (cause 1 and 2 are your master outs). Let’s see this is kind of like reamping, which I’ve done with my 18i20 before.
