Hello,
We have a new Express 5.25, and are trying to record through a presonus usb audiobox onto computer, using Studio One.
We are really disappointed to hear the sound coming out of the preamp 'send' output. For one thing -- there is no reverb at all! A very flat sound gets recorded. And we've been spending a lot of time developing good tone settings that we like coming out of the Mesa. We are obviously not going to get those sounds through this preamp output, at ALL.
We've also tried the 4 ohm speaker output plugged into the audiobox. With that we get background hum which is really significant. Makes the signal go up a third of the way (in the software) while the guitar is silent -- before anything is played. At all sorts of volume settings.
The only other alternative we can think of is to mike the amp. This is really not do-able considering this is a home recording studio, and there is a lot of house noise -- especially the dang computer itself, which must be on to do the recording. We have no experience with miking amps, so if anyone thinks this is the solution, please advise on microphones and techniques to record in a noisy environment. We can't soundproof the room, and even if we could, the sounds IN the room are the most significant.
Really could use some advice here -- how do people here get good sound, recording from a Mesa Express?
Thanks for any knowledgeable advice,
NJ
We have a new Express 5.25, and are trying to record through a presonus usb audiobox onto computer, using Studio One.
We are really disappointed to hear the sound coming out of the preamp 'send' output. For one thing -- there is no reverb at all! A very flat sound gets recorded. And we've been spending a lot of time developing good tone settings that we like coming out of the Mesa. We are obviously not going to get those sounds through this preamp output, at ALL.
We've also tried the 4 ohm speaker output plugged into the audiobox. With that we get background hum which is really significant. Makes the signal go up a third of the way (in the software) while the guitar is silent -- before anything is played. At all sorts of volume settings.
The only other alternative we can think of is to mike the amp. This is really not do-able considering this is a home recording studio, and there is a lot of house noise -- especially the dang computer itself, which must be on to do the recording. We have no experience with miking amps, so if anyone thinks this is the solution, please advise on microphones and techniques to record in a noisy environment. We can't soundproof the room, and even if we could, the sounds IN the room are the most significant.
Really could use some advice here -- how do people here get good sound, recording from a Mesa Express?
Thanks for any knowledgeable advice,
NJ