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Saturday, January 14, 2023

REAMPING: How to reamp a guitar track (part 1/2)

 Hello and welcome to this week's article!

Few years ago we have done an article about reamping (click here for the main article): now it's time to see in detail, step by step, how to reamp a guitar track.

The first thing to lear is how to route your channels to make sure that from the output channel of your audio interface only the guitar di signal comes out, while from your headphones or monitors you can keep listening to the whole project.

First off: you need to have in your project a DI guitar track, then, since usually all the tracks go to the stereo out, we need to steer this one away from there and make it go to a separate exit of our DAW and audio interface, an exit in which only our guitar track will be.

Today we're using the Presonus Studio One interface, but it should work more or less like this in every DAW: 

1) Go to song setup -> inputs and outputs and create a new mono output besides the standard stereo one (I've called it reamp, and the M there stands for Mono).



I have chosen "LINE 3", which means that when I assign the DI track to the output named "reamp" it will be listenable only by plugging the headphones to the output n.3 of my audio interface.

2) While all the tracks are assigned by default to the main out, meaning they will all end up into the stereo out buss (in the pic it's called "principale", because my interface is in Italian), I have changed the out for my DI track into "reamp", the new output we have created.



3) now we need to assign this "reamp" out to the physical out n.3 in my audio interface (you can assign it obviously to any out you want, just make sure the DAW and the output you're using in your interface are matching), and in order to do this we need to open the control panel of our audio interface, in my case it's the Saffire Mix Control from Focusrite.


In this case I assign "DAW 3" (which means the output to which we have routed our DI track in the DAW, which as you can see in the first picture is the out called "line 3") and we assign it in the "line output 3" slot (red arrow in the bottom of the pic), and we also assign it to a channel in the virtual mixer (red arrow in the top).

Now if everything went according to the plan, if we plug the headphones to the main headphone out of the audio interface we should be able to hear all the tracks going into the stereo buss EXCEPT the guitar DI one, while if we plug them into the out n.3 we should be able to hear only our DI track.

Once this complex preparation phase is done, it's TIME TO REAMP!


CLICK HERE FOR PART 2/2


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1 comment:

  1. Your multi-part series on reamping guitar tracks is incredibly informative and well-structured. Could you elaborate on the considerations for choosing the appropriate level and impedance settings when sending the reamped signal back to the amplifier? Tel U

    ReplyDelete