Bandmate returned from NAMM with an account of a device that could be good news for "natural" acoustic sound with existing pickup. It's an amaxing pedal called the Tone Dexter.
http://audiosprockets.com
Seems that it will learn, sample, and store a number of mics that you set it up with.
I have no interest or stock in this company! He was blown away and after checking the site out, I was too.
They haven't released info on pricing but imagine it might be costly.
Interested in your thoughts!
Comments
There are a few products now that profile sound, the Kemper rack mount was the first I was aware of and The Axe- Fx II (best piece of guitar gear I have owned) followed suit. My guess is there is similar technology used and it has been available for electric amps for a few years now. Of course i could be talking out my a** but if it is similar, the Kemper comes in a bit over 1500.00 with considerably more bells and whistles.
www.scoredog.tv
We can play "the price is right", I say $599, that's around $40 per knob.
Go into a friend's studio, play through the best mic in the house for about a minute, and it learns the sound. This isn't typical COSM technology with preset models.
Less is maybe more for me @Scoredog. Enough EQ and a boost for solos.
www.scoredog.tv
First the file is played on a Brian Moore solid body so the feel is a bit different than a GJ guitar and probably most important the piezo I used to tone match is also on the BM so the matching quality is probably not close to if i had used a GJ guitar with a piezo. Also this is the first time I tone matched and I can see results can be wildly different depending on the original source. also the source can be quite different depending on whether chords, notes, where on the neck etc etc is used. The example is in 3 parts.
1. A Holo D doing a bit of nuages (I added a touch of verb)
2. Holo doing rhythm.
3. Dupont doing rhythm and holo comes in for a lead.
None of this of course rivals the real deal but for a live bar situation it might work better than some other options, again i used a piezo electric to tone match, I am sure there are better options but i don't like piezo pickups on acoustics so I don't own one..:)
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/31773631/Tone Matching.mp3
www.scoredog.tv
@Stringswinger not bad, especially the Holo! Those things are amazing but so is price! How do you create the samples?
On the Dupont I just took a piece of a recording I liked which I had done and used that as a test. For the Holo I recorded specifically with the intent of capturing it for the tone match (about 10 secs). They were recorded into my Daw "Logic". Logic then goes into the axe fx and the take is captured there. Then the piezo goes into the instrument input of the axe-fx and you record basically the same thing, click enter and compare.
After thinking about this for a few hours now I believe if I recorded the guitar with certain dynamics for the purpose of tone modeling and give a few more attempts it can be considerably better, and of course since it's pretty easy to do I'll try a few more later. The big test of course is live and since playing a Brian Moore guitar would ruin the facade of being a Gypsy guitarist i'm not sure how I will find out how well this works, but something will probably come to me.
www.scoredog.tv
I think you're right about tweaking capture.