![]() S-Gear is a great amp model, and has great after the amp effects. MainStage or Cantabile are good choices for building a virtual rig based on S-Gear that will provide flexible patch, MIDI control and preset flexibility. Sounds like you are already on the right track. Again, an EQ between your S-Gear setup and your powered speaker can help here. So if your speaker is a louder than your phones, bass and treble will be overwhelmingly loud if you create your sounds on quieter headphones. ![]() Second, due to the Fletcher-Munson effect, the perceived loudness of different frequencies varies depending on loudness. But there are two things to be aware of:įirst, resonance frequencies can play tricks when moving from phones to speakers - in your headphones they won't be an issue, but they can cause all kinds of feedback squeals on a loud speaker, so it's useful to have a separate EQ in your setup for eliminating nasty peaks (and adjusting the sometimes-not-so-flat response of your speakers). Ideally, you should use flat-response powered speakers, so the sound should not be too much different from your headphones. On the Mac there is always Mainstage, but Cantabile will be there in the near future as wellĢ. ![]() Since Forte is not being developed anymore, the best contender on the Windows platform is IMO Cantabile - super-powerful and flexible, great support and a lively and helpful community. 1: if you just want to chain the same plugins pre and post S-Gear, any DAW or free VST host (Cantabile Lite is free) will do, but if you want to change your setups dynamically (turn a stompbox on/off, use different configurations for verse, chorus etc) and have a lot of different setups for your various songs, there's nothing better than a dedicated VST live host. ![]()
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