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CREATE YOUR OWN IMPULSES

STEPS

Why not create your own impulses? As you will see, the principle is very simple. Now, to create realistic-sounding impulses, it takes some trials and mistakes, it can be time-consuming, but it isn't difficult.

1 - Setting the D.A.W.
2 - Connecting the cables and microphone
3 - Setting the volume
4 - Recording what will become the impulse
5 - Exporting the recorded sound
6 - Finalizing the impulse
7 - Voilà!
8 - One step further
9 - Reverb impulses

MY IMPULSES

You can listen to samples I did with impulses I created myself. You may freely download and use these impulses at your convenience in your own musical creations.
This is what you'll need to create your impulses

- A "Test Tone" audio file, sweeping all frequencies from 20 Hz to 20 KHz, and lasting 3 to 12 seconds,

- A deconvolving software,

- At least one good microphone (the quality of the impulse depends greatly on the quality of the microphone),

- At least one cabinet, speaker, or any sound device you wish to create an impulse from,

- A recording software (any D.A.W. will do),

- An audio interface allowing to play and record simultaneously.

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STEPS

GENERATING A TEST TONE

A Test Tone is an audio file sweeping all frequencies from 20 Hz to 20 KHz (from low to high). This is the sound we'll be playing through the device we want to make an impulse with.

This is what a 3-second Test Tone sounds like:

Warning: lower the volume, this sound is not pleasant!
First download and install this deconvolving software:

Voxengo Deconvolver (voxengo_deconvolver.zip, 324 KB).

This is the demo version (the full version costs 40 dollars and can be bought here if you wish). The demo only allows the creation of 3 impulses per session, and one impulse at a time, but all you need to do is close and re-open the software to create more impulses. So it isn't really bothering, unless you spend your days creating impulses...

With Deconvolver, you can generate a Test Tone. Start Deconvolver, click on "Test Tone Gen" at the bottom (#1 on the screenshot), select the Out Bit Depth (2) and the Sample Rate (3) you usually use in your D.A.W., select Mono in Channels (4), leave the default duration on 12 seconds (5).

Note that after several tries, I didn't notice any difference in quality between the default 12-second Test Tone and a 3-second Test Tone. So now, I use 3-second Test Tones, which allows me to work faster and leave my neighbor's ears in peace... and mine!

I unchecked the "Apply fade-in and fade-out..." box (6), but you can leave it checked if you wish. Finally, click on "Generate" (7) and choose the out-folder (8) for your Test Tone file. You will get a WAV file sweeping all frequencies from 20 Hz to 20 KHz. Not very musical, but very useful!
Deconvolver
Deconvolver
Deconvolver


Now that you have created a Test Tone, you can use it to record impulses.
In the following steps, we'll be using a mono Test Tone to create a mono impulse.

Download 4 Test Tones
(3 secondes, 44,1 et 48 KHz, 24 bits, mono and stereo, wav format) (Test_Tones.zip, 2,03 MB)
STEP 1

Open your D.A.W., create a mono audio track and place your brand new Test Tone file on it. Your recording will have to be slightly longer than the length of the Test Tone file. Create a second mono audio track. This is where you are going to record your take. You will then create as many mono tracks as you need for your takes.
STEP 2

I connected a microphone in my audio interface. I connected the output #3 from the audio interface to the Input of my amplifier with a mono Jack cable (guitar jack), so that the Test Tone sound will go through the amplifier. I set the audio track with the Test Tone in such a way that the sound goes through the audio interface output #3. When I play the Test Tone, the sound thus goes out through the Orange Micro Crush. My microphone is connected to the Input #1 of my audio interface. The blank audio track is set to record sound from input #1, so it will record the sound from the microphone.
I placed the microphone in front of the amplifier. Where exactly? Well, you have to try various positions, depending on the amplifier, on the microphone, until you get a satisfying result. That is the hardest part: find a good positioning for the microphone. Considering the size of the Orange Micro Crush, I took the simplest option: dead center, very close to the grill.
STEP 3

Connections are ready, the microphone is in place... Now you have to test the sound volume. Be careful, Test Tones are pretty uncomfortable to listen to and can be pretty nasty for your ears, use ear protection, especially at high volume levels! If you do this in an appartment, do not do this at night, unless you hate your neighbors of course.
Play the Test Tone and:
    - Adjust the amplifier volume in order to have sufficient volume level to record,
    - Adjust the recording volume on the recording track. Your recording must not clip. Use the entry level of your audio interface and the amplifier volume button so that the record level does not go above -6 dB, and never ever above 0 dB in any case! It's best to vary the recording volume than raise the amplifier volume. Believe me, once you have heard a loud Test Tone, you'll never want to hear it again!
STEP 4

You're good? Levels checked? So start recording the Test Tone. Record all the Test Tone duration (3 seconds if that's the duration you chose), and most importantly: let the recording last longer than the Test Tone (one extra second is enough). Of course, you must not make any noise during the recording, in order to avoid recording any unwanted noise.
Now, export the recorded file in mono. Only export the recorded track. Mute the Test Tone track to avoid exporting it!
STEP 5

Open Deconvolver again. On top, in Test Tone File, click on Browse and get your Test Tone where you put it. Then click on the next Browse button in File Folder, and get the WAV file you exported and shortened in Step 5. Deconvolver will now compare your file and the Test Tone, and through complex mathematical convolution calculation, it will generate an impulse...
For the other options, check MP Transform, which is supposed to enhance the quality, although I am unable to tell you why. Check Normalize to -0.3 dBFS, which will automatically raise the volume of your impulse at a level of -0.3 dB.
Now click on Process at the bottom to start calculation. Depending on your computer, the calculation time will last more or less. It took less than 1 second in my case... pretty fast. Deconvolver adds the generated file in the same folder as your exported file. The file name is the same, with "_dc" (DeConvolver) added at the end. And we're almost finished.
STEP 6

Retrieve your exported file and open it with any audio editor. You are going to delete the end of the file. As you should see, the generated file has a big curve at the beginning, then the rest of the curve is almost flat. There can be peaks farther in the waveform, due to the fact that the recorded file is longer than the Test Tone. These are interferences created during the deconvolving process, and you don't need those. The impulse does not need to be longer than 50 milliseconds (0.050 seconds)... That's very short. So the resulting file will be about 2 or 3 KB, sometimes a bit more, depending on the type of sound you want. Save your file without changing its attributes: if you had a mono 24 bit, 48 KHz file, you should keep it like that. Be careful however, some impulses need to be longer. Only cut the end of the waveform starting where it becomes flat, that is to say when its volume level is null. When recording impulses that have long reverb trails, you can get impulses that are much longer than 50 ms. Some impulses can last several seconds.
Impulsion
Here are the first 12 milliseconds of an impulse waveform. The rest is pretty much flat..
Voilà! That's your impulse. Rename the file to give it an explicit name. That will make it easier for you to know what it is when you have created many impulses.
For instance, a file name could be: Peavey - SM57 Edge 05 cm.wav.
This means: Peavey amplifier, SM57 microphone, position Edge, distance 5 cm between amp and mike.
If you share your impulses with other people, it will also be easier for other users to know what your impulses are.
ET VOILÀ !

Now you can test your impulse and see whether it meets your expectations... and create some more, with more microphones, various positionnings, other amplifiers. You can also create stereo impulses with two microphones, stereo audio tracks and a stereo Test Tone. Experiment!
ONE STEP FURTHER

That isn't all. We just saw how to create impulses reproducing the sound characteristics of a cabinet in order to simulate a recording with this particular cabinet. The same technique will allow you to reproduce the sound characteristics of a place! Imagine you wish to creat an impulse out of your living room, because you like the way this room sounds. It could be the acoustics of your bathroom, your garage, your car interior, or the rehearsal room of your band. It's all possible with the same method.

Of course, there are a few differences. First, it will be more interesting to create stereo impulses to simulate a real feeling of space. That means you will need two (identical) microphones, or make two takes if you have only one microphone, and make one mono track for each of the left and right takes. You can vary the feeling of space by changing the left/right panning of the two tracks.

Then instead of playing the Test Tone through a guitar cab as we did in the above example, you will have to play the Test Tone through speakers, which need to be as neutral as possible, like monitor speakers. Play the Test Tone at a volume that fits in the venue, place your microphones in the right spot to capture the atmosphere of the place. Of course, you don't have to content yourself with only one recording spot. For example, in any room, you can position your microphones right in the middle, or in opposite angles, place them face to face or facing opposite directions, near the speakers or far from them, etc. In each case, you will get different results, corresponding to different ways of perceiving a sound from various spots in one particular venue. You don't hear exactly the same thing if you lie down on the floor, position yourself in a corner or stand in the middle of a room. You decide where you want to capture the sound... try some spot that seems logical, or try to get various atmospheres out of one room.

In the end, you can use the impulses you created in any impulse loader and make it a reverb plugin, reproducing the sound characteristics of the venue you took the impulse from.

Venue impulses to download

More than 160 impulses from real or virtual venues, to use in an impulse loader:
Impulses for reverb (reverb_impulses.zip, 36.9 MB)

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PERSONAL IMPULSES

For these demos, I used the NRR1 head amp simulator by Ignite Amps, and SIR Convolution as an impulse loader. The guitar is a Fender Stratocaster American Deluxe.

Vox AC4 TV - Orange Micro Crush CR3 - Roland Micro Cube - Peavey Ecoustic 110 EFX





Vox AC4 TV

Vox AC4TV

This small Vox tube amp delivers a vintage sound. Excellent for clean tones and good old bluesy crunch. Perfect for Rock or Blues.
10-inch speaker, 4W power, about 9 kg (20lbs), a Tone knob, a Volume knob, a 4W/1W/¼W selector and that's it. The louder you play, the crunchier the sound gets.
4W only? It doesn't sound like much and you can read that it's ideal to take advantage of this amp at home, without disturbing the neighbors. Well... even at ¼W power, the sound level is impressive! You won't crank up the volume all the way up, because that will be super loud! But the sound is great, a very distinctive Vox sound. The impulses I created out of the AC4 will faithfully reproduce that distinctive British sound.



Download: Vox AC4TV Impulses
(14 impulses - impulses_vox_ac4tv_grebz.zip, 381 KB)



Orange Micro Crush CR3

Orange Micro Crush & Shure SM57

Miniature solid state 3W amplifier, 15 cm (6 in) high, with a 4-inch speaker, light-weight 800 g (about 1lb 12oz), works on battery or off the mains (transformer not included!), headset plug, overdrive knob, that's a mini-amp you can take with you anywhere. Of course, the sound is somewhat shrill, there are almost no low tones, but the Tone knob can help improve things a bit. The impulses I created are a pretty close simulation of this distinctive sound. You won't make an album out of this, but it can add a touch of originality.



Download: Orange Micro Crush Impulses
(12 impulses - impulses_orange_micro_crush_grebz.zip, 403 KB)



Roland Micro Cube

Roland Micro Cube & Shure SM57

This is another small amplifier, bigger than the Orange Micro Crush. The manufacturer is Roland and this amp can also work on battery or off the mains (6 AAA batteries for about 20 hours). You can add a shoulder strap and take it out with you to play in the street if you like. This is a solid state amplifier with included amp simulation, reverb, delay and a few other effects are included, it's a 2 watt amplifier (but it can get loud), 5-inch speaker, 3.3 kg (7lb 4oz), headset plug... all you need to play without making the neighbors crazy and yet...
Watch this YouTube demo, and this one, from the same guy. It could make you want to buy a Micro Cube!



Download: Roland Micro Cube Impulses
(40 impulses - impulses_roland_micro_cube_grebz.zip, 902 KB)



Peavey Ecoustic 110 EFX

Peavey Ecoustic 110 EFX

This solid state Peavey amp was made for electro-acoustic guitars. It also works fine with vocals, violin or harmonica.
10-inch speaker, bi-amplified with 30W for lows and 10W for highs, with reverb, chorus, delay effects and more.
The next sample was made with a 6-string electro-acoustic guitar and a 12-string electro-acoustic guitar. I used the Ignite Amps' NRR1 and Poulin's Lextac amp sims.



Download: Peavey Ecoustic 110 EFX Impulses
(64 impulses - impulses_peavey_ecoustic_110efx_grebz.zip, 421 KB)

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MESSAGES

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Messages page # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35



aissa
le 27/01/2013 à 14h24

Bonjour,

Je suis chanteur de reggae et rappeur, j'aurais voulu connaître vos tarifs pour l'enregistrement de quelques titres à moi.

Je souhaiterais faire la prise de voix plus le mix.

Je suis habitué au studio. Faites-vous des tarifs à la journée ?

Cordialement.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>Bonjour Aissa,

Merci de votre confiance, mais je ne suis pas un professionnel. Je n'ai pas de studio, simplement un home studio dans une pièce de mon appartement.
Je me contente de faire mes propres enregistrements, à l'occasion je bosse avec quelques potes pour leur filer un coup de main, mais ce n'est pas mon métier !
Et puis je n'ai jamais mixé de reggae ou de rap, alors je m'en voudrais de faire mal les choses dans un style que je ne maîtrise pas. Je vous conseille de vous tourner vers un studio pro spécialisé dans votre style, il doit être possible d'en trouver des pas trop chers.

Grebz</em>



Veji
le 22/01/2013 à 02h42

Which particular Redwirez impulses
1)which mic(sm57/r121/421 etc)
2)distance(0''/0.5''/1''/2'')
3)cap/cone capedge etc
are your favorites for distortion and clean?

Also do you use the bass with shb-1 w/impulses or without?

Thanks

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>Hello again Veji,

Concerning the SHB-1 bass amp sim, I find it very usable with and without impulses. Depends on the sound you want to get. The sound is brighter without impulses, deeper with impulses. It also depends on the tone you select on your bass when recording, on the settings you have in SHB-1 and on the impulse you pick.

I also sometimes don't use any amp sim for the bass track, leaving only the direct sound if it fits the song.

Or you can have one bass track with direct sound only, and a second bass track (a copy of the direct track) with an amp sim. Mixing the 2 can bring you the qualities of each, but it could also blur your bass sound. You need to try various possibilities and see (or hear) for yourself. Each song is different, so don't think you got it set once and for all. You probably need to make adjustments and try different combinations every time.

Now about the Redwirez impulses:
It's pretty damn difficult to tell you which impulses sound best. You probably won't use the same impulses if you play Metal songs or Rock'n Rollish songs. I am pretty sure that ACDC, Marilyn Manson, the Beatles, Oasis, Nirvana, Opeth, Metallica, Muse and Radiohead don't use the same gear.

It might be a good idea to try and find out what gear your favorite bands use and pick something similar, if that's their music genre you want to play.

As for me, I often use Vox AC30, because I love the Vox sound. That's my favorite.
But I also use Orange impulses, Engl Pro, Marshall 1960 as second choices.
Soldano, Bogner Uberkab and Mesa Rectifier from time to time.

For bass cabs, I try them all and change frequently. I don't have one favorite in particular. I have 4 impulse collections from Redwirez for bass: 2 Ampegs, Aquilar and Hartke cabs. They all have different qualities.

About the microphones and their positionning: most of the time, I use 2 impulses per guitar track.
My starting point is one R121 mic, CapEdge, 4'', and one SM57 mic, Cap, 0''. I found this combination to be pretty complementary, and it gives me a sound I'm immediately satisfied with. But it's not perfect every single time.
From that starting point, I will try to change the distances a bit until I find THE perfect combination (to my ears). Could be R121 at 2'' instead of 4, or CapOffAxis instead of Cap, etc.
It can be very time-consuming, it takes a bit of trials and errors, but if you want to reach your goal, that is to get THE sound you like, you have to go through this.

I also use my own impulses, particularly the Vox AC4 impulses, which sound pretty good, I'm proud :-)

Also note that the guitar you use will make a difference. My main guitar is a Fender Stratocaster, but a friend of mine lent me his Tokai Les Paul, and so my impulse settings need to be different, because these guitars sound different.

I also use Neumann U87 impulses, 421 or 414 mics... Really, I try a lot of things and it takes time.
Oh... and you have to try it in context. I mean, if you try various impulses while listening to your soloed guitar track, you will find a great sounding impulse combination, but when you play all the tracks together with all instruments, you will find that your combination doesn't sound so great anymore.

Have fun,

Grebz</em>



Chochel
le 20/01/2013 à 07h40

J'ai tenté L'UCG 102 Behringer + AC Box Combo soi-disant facile, résultat : pas un son... Énervé, j'ai découvert Studio de Grebz.

Ma question :
Est-ce que j'oublie l'UCG102 ?
Quel montage serait le plus aisé et le plus simple pour un premier essai ? Le combo Marshall ?

Par la suite, je tenterai des montages plus sophistiqués.

Cordialement,
JP



Veji
le 19/01/2013 à 15h50

Hi,
What are your top 5 best amp plugins and top 5 best cab impulses?
Also can you send me the recabinet 2... I can't find it anymore.
Thanks

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>
Hi,

My favorite amp plugins for guitar are:
 - Ignite Amps' NRR1 (free product).
 - TSE's X50 (free product).
 - Kuassa's Amplifikation Creme (retail product), US$ 34. Only emulates one amp, but the sound you get is fantastic.
 - Overloud's TH2 (retail product), much more expensive - US$ 197 - but it emulates several real amps.

And for bass :
 - Ignite Amps' SHB1
 - Helian's 1st Bass or 2nd Bass (free products), which sound the same to me.

As for impulses, I use only Redwirez' impulses (retail products) which in my opinion are the ones that sound best of all the impulses I've tested so far. They're not free, but they're really unexpensive. The first cab impulses you buy will cost you US$9, then the more you buy, the more discount you get for the next impulses. And you can pick only the impulses you are interested in.

I cannot send you Recabinet's impulses, they are a discontinued retail product. They have been replaced by Recabinet 3, which cost only US$ 19.99 at the moment. That's quite a bargain, even though I think that Recabinet's impulses are not as good as Redwirez'. Your choice.

Finally, I am not sending any retail product to anyone. On my site, I make a large collection of free products available (amp sims, impulse loaders and impulses) for anyone to download, but I am not giving away any commercial products.

Cheers,
Grebz
</em>



Jak2112
le 08/01/2013 à 18h38

Salut !
Tout d'abord, félicitations et merci pour ce super site que je viens de découvrir et qui est très utile, notamment pour ceux qui débutent comme moi dans la MAO.
Donc en ce moment j'explore et je teste, mais j'ai un petit problème : je n'arrive pas à lire les extraits que vous proposez pour illustrer les différents plugins et logiciels ; le petit lecteur indique : Liste vide ! Peut-être ai-je oublié une manip en route ou autre ? Si vous pouviez m'aider ce serait super.
Merci d'avance et encore bravo !
Cordialement.
Jak2112

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

<em>Bonjour, et merci !

En ce qui concerne le problème de lecture des extraits... il s'agit de lecteurs Flash, il peut donc y avoir des problèmes de compatibilité avec certains navigateurs.

De plus, si vous utilisez un système Apple, sachez qu'Apple a décidé (unilatéralement) de bannir Flash de ses machines, donc impossible de lire quoi que ce soit en Flash avec un iPad par exemple ou un iPhone. Pour les ordinateurs Mac, je ne sais pas trop, je n'ai pas eu l'occasion d'essayer, mais je crois avoir lu que c'était possible en téléchargeant le plugin Flash Player, comme sur PC. En ce qui concerne Linux, j'ai lu que seul le navigateur Chrome proposait la compatibilité Flash.

Entre parenthèses, il vaut mieux que vous soyez sur PC si vous comptez télécharger des choses sur mon site, parce que je ne propose que des plugins pour PC. Je suis moi-même utilisateur PC, donc je ne connais pas l'univers Mac ou Linux. Rien de sectaire, mais je suis un simple particulier, je ne peux pas m'occuper de tout, donc je m'occupe de ce que je connais uniquement ! Mais utiliser un Mac pour faire de la MAO est une excellente chose, aucun doute là-dessus. Après, tout est question de préférence et d'affinités. Fin de la parenthèse.

Si vous êtes sur PC avec Windows, il n'y a pas de raison que vous ne puissiez pas lire les extraits, à moins que votre navigateur Internet soit trop ancien, donc pas à jour ou incompatible, mais tous ceux que je connais fonctionnent bien. J'ai testé avec Internet Explorer, Chrome, Firefox, Opera et Safari, et mon site fonctionne bien avec chacun d'entre eux.

Ce que je vais faire, c'est essayer de proposer systématiquement de télécharger les extraits sonores en version mp3, ce qui permettra à tout le monde de pouvoir quand même les écouter même lorsque le lecteur Flash ne fonctionne pas. Il va me falloir un peu de temps pour mettre tout ça en place, mais je vais le faire rapidement, promis.

Grebz</em>

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