This site may earn a commission from merchant links like Ebay, Amazon, and others.
You have to have a better sales pitch. "Honey, aren't you ready to have a yard where you can have pretty flowers and a back porch swing where you could relax while I am in the basement playing?"Are you freakin' serious?
I can imagine the conversation already:
"Honey, we're moving. I can't get the room pumping with my 5" monitors. Let's move to a house and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars so I can get some 8" monitors rollin'"
You have to have a better sales pitch. "Honey, aren't you ready to have a yard where you can have pretty flowers and a back porch swing where you could relax while I am in the basement playing?"
There are lots of benefits. One reason we moved is because city schools suck and we wanted our kids to go to a good school. Also, the apartments had people trashing the parking lots, drunk people knocking on random doors at 3am, etc... wanted away from that.Ironically, we talked about this the other day after recent break-ins in the neighborhood were some friends live. She's perfectly happy living in the city. Also she's terrible with plants
I can get these to noise complaint levels in my apartment:
View attachment 142695
Anyone suggesting studio monitors for an untreated, non-soundproof apartment is fucking nuts.
Conversely I can get great tone from my 5153 and a 4x12 at lower than TV volumes
Are you freakin' serious?
You should follow him for some more excellent financial tips.
Its really not about the volume, it is more about the surface area of the speakers, and the size of the enclosure.According to those who believe tone = pushing a volume of air, no you can't!
One of my best purchases for apartment volume tone is just a volume pedal in the loop. I'd been using the 1 watt mode and putting the volume at like 0.5 for years, but with the volume pedal I can set the amp to full power and make it usable with the pedal. That being said I think I still prefer Suhr RL > interface > 2 inch desktop speakers from 15 years ago with an IR in a DAW. Better yet, I put the amp in a closet and just plug a cable in to my interface and use a plugin for 99.99999% of at-home jamming.
I am not broke, so it would benefit most people!You should follow him for some more excellent financial tips.
I am not broke, so it would benefit most people!
These days I normally use a reactive loadbox, and then run that back through a a poweramp to get the loud tone, at low volumes. WAY better feel than amp plugins.
The past week I have been running my Triple Recto into a reactive loadbox, through a mixer, and then back into a 4xKT88 200w poweramp into 2 212 cabs in stereo. HUGE massive sound, at whisper quiet volumes. Add some stereo delay and reverb.That's just the kind of fuckery I'd want to try lol. I'd also like to use a power amp just to see what different amp plugins sound like through an actual cab.
And if you mic’d the 212’s you would be back at small/IR. Amp in the room only happens with an amp in the room.The past week I have been running my Triple Recto into a reactive loadbox, through a mixer, and then back into a 4xKT88 200w poweramp into 2 212 cabs in stereo. HUGE massive sound, at whisper quiet volumes. Add some stereo delay and reverb.
Personally, I always think the IR is the weak link. Going back into actual cabs brings the bigness.
Yes, but that is for the purpose of recording, not playing for the enjoyment of playing, as I mentioned above. Two different situations/purposes.And if you mic’d the 212’s you would be back at small/IR. Amp in the room only happens with an amp in the room.
I also wonder what “whisper quiet” actually measures at when we throw it around
I see it as 2 different things. Normally recorded tones are not fun to play, or sound great by themselves. They are tweaked to sound good in a mix, and feel dont matter.My recording tones are my playing tones when it comes to my axefx and i have 0 plans to ever mic my big rigs.
probably a fair guess that others run that way too for the most part.
Most people I know that play have the end goal of either releasing recorded music or performing live. For my use I wouldn't want to try to figure out how to deal with a massive tonal shift from "for fun" times to "actually doing stuff" times.I dont get the point of all these people wanting 'mix-ready' or 'stage-ready' tones, when they never play live, and never record a thing. Have fun. Make it sound good instead.