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1.09.2012

Featured Equipment Of The Week: Mackie Onyx 1620i 16ch firewire mixer

Onyx-i Series FireWire Production Mixers combine the benefits of a powerful computer interface with the tactile, hands-on control of a premium analog mixer, creating an easy-to-use system that’s perfect for studio or live applications. Eight full channels of mic pres and four stereo channels means there are few sessions that the Onyx 1620i cannot handle. Each mic channel features 4-band Perkins EQ with dual sweepable mids, providing truly professional tone-shaping. Band-friendly features like the dedicated talkback section with built-in mic allow you to easily communicate with the talent, whether behind the glass or in front of stage monitors. Deep FireWire integration, along with complete platform support allows you to easily record in the studio, or at the gig. The matter is settled then…the 1620i is a true band workhorse.
Find out more: Mackie Onyx 1620i 16ch mixer with firewire

Top Features
* 12-channel premium analog mixer with integrated 24-bit/96kHz FireWire I/O
* 8 Onyx boutique-quality mic preamps
* 3-band Perkins EQ with sweepable mids on mic/line channels
* 3-band Perkins EQ on stereo Line channels
*16x2 FireWire allows for simultaneous streaming of all channels, auxes and master L/R
* 4 aux sends with pre/post assignment
* Smooth 60mm channel and master faders
* Built-in DI on first two channels for direct connection of guitars, bass, etc.
* Individual 48V phantom power switches on all mic inputs
* Talkback section with built in mic and flexible routing
* "Planet Earth" switching power supply for worldwide use
* Optional rack kit available
Find out more about Mackie Onyx 1620i at Revolution Audio

1.02.2012

Distortion Explained Part 2

Distortion Explained Part 2
Part 2 of this article covers the differences between various types of guitar distortions - Overdrives, Fuzz, hi-gain and more. Part 1 is here.


Distortion Pedals

Overdrive/Crunch

boss_od-3Some distortion effects provide an “overdrive” effect. Either by using a vacuum tube, or by using simulated tube modeling techniques, the top of the wave form is compressed, giving a smoother distorted signal than regular distortion effects. When an overdrive effect is used at a high setting, the sound’s waveform can become clipped, which imparts a gritty or “dirty” tone, which sounds like a tube amplifier “driven” to its limit. Used in conjunction with an amplifier, especially a tube amplifier, driven to the point of mild tonal breakup short of what would be generally considered distortion or overdrive, or along with another, stronger overdrive or distortion pedal, these can produce extremely thick distortion. Today there is a huge variety of overdrive pedals including the Boss OD-3 Overdrive.

Overdrive Distortion

boss-distortion-pedal-ds-1Overdrive distortion is a well-known distortion. While the general purpose is to emulate classic “warm-tube” sounds, distortion pedals can be distinguished from overdrive pedals in that the intent is to provide players with instant access to the sound of a high-gain Marshall amplifier such as the JCM800 pushed past the point of tonal breakup and into the range of tonal distortion known to electric guitarists as “saturated gain.” Some guitarists will use these pedals along with an already distorted amp or along with a milder overdrive effect to produce radically high-gain sounds. Although most distortion devices use solid-state circuitry, some “tube distortion” pedals are designed with preamplifier vacuum tubes. In some cases, tube distortion pedals use power tubes or a preamp tube used as a power tube driving a built-in “dummy load.”
The Boss DS-1 Distortion is a solid state overdrive distortion pedal.

Fuzz

ehbigmuffrussiaFuzz was originally intended to recreate the classic 1960’s tone of an overdriven tube amp combined with torn speaker cones. Oldschool guitar players would use a screwdriver to poke several holes through the the guitar amp speaker to achieve a similar sound. Since the original designs, more extreme fuzz pedals have been designed and produced, incorporating octave-up effects, oscillation, gating, and greater amounts of distortion. The Electro-Harmonix Big Muff is a classic fuzz pedal.

Hi-Gain

line6_ubermetalHi-Gain is the sound most used in Heavy metal. High gain in normal electric guitar playing simply references a thick sound produced by heavily overdriven amplifier tubes, a distortion pedal, or some combination of both–the essential component is the typically loud, thick, harmonically rich, and sustaining quality of the tone. However, the Hi-Gain sound of modern pedals is somewhat distinct from, although descended from, this sound. The distortion often produces sounds not possible any other way. Many extreme distortions are either hi-gain or the descendants of such.
An example of a hi-gain pedal is the Line 6 Uber Metal

Power-tube pedal

Ibanez-Tube-KingPower tube distortion is a unique kind of saturation when tube amps output stages are overdriven, unfortunately this kind of really powerful distortion only happens at high volumes. A Power-Tube pedal contains a power tube and optional dummy load, or a preamp tube used as a power tube. This allows the device to produce power-tube distortion independently of volume.
An example of a tube based distortion pedal is the Ibanez Tube King
 

Another way to distort

Digital Wave Shaping

ohmicideThe word clipping in recording is usually a bad thing. And generally it is, unless we’re trying to distort something on purpose. In the digital world we can use powerful wave shaping tools to drastically distort and manipulate a sound. Rather than subject you to the technical explanation of how it works, just listen to Nine Inch Nails, they use this a lot. It’s perfect for really harsh, aggressive, unnatural and broken sounds. The Ohmforce Ohmicide plugin is an example of this style.

Why Is This Important?

Alright, so why did I just explain those different types of distortion sounds? Because knowing those sounds can help you be a better musician, engineer and producer. It will help you make decisions on what gear to purchase and what is appropriate for a song.

What Else?

Besides guitar what else is distortion good for? Well, pretty much anything, as long as it’s appropriate for the song.
  • Slight distortion can make something sound more exciting, too much can sometimes make it really tiny sounding.
  • When recording electric guitars, you can get a way bigger sound by using less gain and recording the same part multiple times, double or quad-tracking.
  • Distortion can sound really cool on drums, but you may have to heavily gate the drums, the sustain can get out of control.

Featured Equipment of the Week: AKG Perception 120 USB Microphone

AKG Perception 120 USB Microphone
The Perception 120 USB is the very first USB-equipped microphone from AKG, offering studio-quality sound performance without requiring any installation or drivers. With the widespread USB standard and its ease of use, this new model allows users without any recording experience to make professional-quality recordings from their home. It is a real plug-and-play device enabling customers to do podcasts, voiceovers and studio-quality rehearsal-recordings quickly and easily.
Find out more about AKG Perception 120 USB

TOP FEATURES
  • Real Plug-and-Play (no installation, no drivers, no reboot required)
  • Supports Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows Vista and Mac OS
  • Integrated high-quality Analogue-to-Digital Converter (24-bit, 128x oversampling) for convincing sound quality and low noise
  • Two-third-inch condenser capsule with a low-mass diaphragm delivers sonic details
  • Switchable bass-cut filter reduces mechanical vibration and wind noise
  • Switchable attenuation pad for close-up miking and loud instruments
  • Blue LEDs indicate operation
  • Integrated pop filter avoids plosives effectively
  • Tripod table stand, swivel mount and USB cable included
  • Designed and engineered in Vienna, Austria 
 Buy AKG Perception 120 USB in the Revolution Audio online store