The only additional guitar-specific plug-in that we use here is Line 6’s Helix Native, which sounds good, has a huge range of amps, cabs, and pedals, and allows the use of two chains at once. Let’s also put in a word for the Limiter audio effect, which is essential for optimising volume levels and reducing the likelihood of distortion (the unwanted digital kind). Once again, experimentation is required and it’s usually an idea to load the defaults for Pedal and Echo and start from there. Live 10 took a giant step with the addition of the Tuner, Pedal, and Echo effects (the Tuner is technically an effect, too) we have used all of these in real-world production situations. We don’t use these presets, but they’re good illustrations of what’s doable, especially when you look at the preconfigured macro controls and their labelling. In the walkthrough, we build a guitar rig from scratch, but there are plenty of presets to explore, for Amp and Cabinet individually, but also filed as racks under Amp Simulation in the Audio Effect Racks section of the Browser.
It’s a small thing, but it was such a relief when Live got a tuner (incidentally, valuable for tuning samples as well)!
#SETTING UP FOCUSRITE USB ASIO ABLETON SOFTWARE#
This used to be the weak link with amp-modelling software and hardware. It’s shocking how different they can sound – it’s not like using a guitar amp. When working on guitar sounds, perhaps more than any other, it’s important to alternate monitoring with headphones and monitors. If you’re likely to have a lot of music gear connected, then Live 10 allows you go into Preferences and name each audio input and output, which can make it faster to set up. You can use any audio interface that has an instrument input, although not all are created equal – you want a clean signal with plenty of gain, otherwise you’ll have to add external boosters which is kind of against the point.