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NAM Loader Pedal: AUv3 Plugin by Rafael Guilherme Bertholdo (Released)

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Comments

  • I want to check out the deluxe capture y’all are talking about, just out of time… what IRs are you using?

  • @maxxpower18 said:
    The Blackstar captures are honestly the gold standard of how captures should be made. I love the stuff from Amalgam and the other person but I don't really need 60+ captures of the same amp with what are essentially useless settings. Blackstar provided the best and most "usable" setting captures and they sound great.

    I wish someone like Orange would partner with T3K because I would love all the OR30, OR15 and Rockerverb captures.

    I own a few Amalgam Captures packs, and I think they're doing great at offering just the right amount of distinctive flavours for each amps. No non sensical redundancy. You usually get around 20 captures that can find their own purpose depending on the type of track you're working on. If I had to compare with IR companies, I think they're doing a similar job as York Audio. You don't have to scroll through endless folders like Ownhammer, if the IR comparison speaks to you. I am not implying Ownhammer's IRs sound bad, but over the years I found that when hunting for guitar tone, exhaustivity can easily lead to option paralysis.
    That being said, those Black Star captures do sound good indeed !

  • wimwim
    edited 1:22AM

    See. This kind of talk is why I just can't get up any enthusiasm for NAM captures, no matter how good people say they are. Merde, I don't want to go fishing in the file system for different captures every time I want to try a different set of settings. I just wanna tweak some knobs.

    To each their own, but every single time I go back to try to get along with the concept, I walk away scratching my head at why it appeals to so many ... though I fully appreciate that it does.

    The good news is it costs me nothing to keep trying, and after I float happily back to my chosen few amp sims, I'm more sure than ever that they're the right choice for me.

    It's good for helping to keep me from actually practicing though. I'll give it that. 😉

  • @JanKun said:

    @maxxpower18 said:
    The Blackstar captures are honestly the gold standard of how captures should be made. I love the stuff from Amalgam and the other person but I don't really need 60+ captures of the same amp with what are essentially useless settings. Blackstar provided the best and most "usable" setting captures and they sound great.

    I wish someone like Orange would partner with T3K because I would love all the OR30, OR15 and Rockerverb captures.

    I own a few Amalgam Captures packs, and I think they're doing great at offering just the right amount of distinctive flavours for each amps. No non sensical redundancy. You usually get around 20 captures that can find their own purpose depending on the type of track you're working on. If I had to compare with IR companies, I think they're doing a similar job as York Audio. You don't have to scroll through endless folders like Ownhammer, if the IR comparison speaks to you. I am not implying Ownhammer's IRs sound bad, but over the years I found that when hunting for guitar tone, exhaustivity can easily lead to option paralysis.
    That being said, those Black Star captures do sound good indeed !

    I think there's definitely enough captures out there to satisfy every niche, which is the nice thing about nam being an open source and "for the people".

    I do agree on Ownhammer. I took me a while but I did find an IR capture that I like with almost all my guitar tones.

  • @wim said:
    See. This kind of talk is why I just can't get up any enthusiasm for NAM captures, no matter how good people say they are. Merde, I don't want to go fishing in the file system for different captures every time I want to try a different set of settings. I just wanna tweak some knobs.

    To each their own, but every single time I go back to try to get along with the concept, I walk away scratching my head at why it appeals to so many ... though I fully appreciate that it does.

    The good news is it costs me nothing to keep trying, and after I float happily back to my chosen few amp sims, I'm more sure than ever that they're the right choice for me.

    It's good for helping to keep me from actually practicing though. I'll give it that. 😉

    I personally could never afford any of these amps so it's nice to be able to play something 'as close as it gets'.

  • @wim said:
    See. This kind of talk is why I just can't get up any enthusiasm for NAM captures, no matter how good people say they are. Merde, I don't want to go fishing in the file system for different captures every time I want to try a different set of settings. I just wanna tweak some knobs.

    To each their own, but every single time I go back to try to get along with the concept, I walk away scratching my head at why it appeals to so many ... though I fully appreciate that it does.

    The good news is it costs me nothing to keep trying, and after I float happily back to my chosen few amp sims, I'm more sure than ever that they're the right choice for me.

    It's good for helping to keep me from actually practicing though. I'll give it that. 😉

    So it’s not the sounds from NAM you don’t like, it’s the process. Hmmm…gives me an idea. What if there was an app/plugin that was NAM based AND used knobs. For examples sake, let’s say a basic amp that just has a gain and tone knob. The app would be loaded with captures that have the various configurations of the gain and tone (G1T5, G5T7, etc). When you turn the knob, it internally switches to the capture that has the combo you turned to. Maybe something like that would be more enticing for you to use? I know I’d dig it. I have a capture collection of the Chase Bliss Brothers Analogman pedal that’s like a hundred different captures. I love the way it sounds but it’s such a slog to menu dive through all the different statics that I don’t use it very much, so I definitely understand where you’re coming from 🤙

  • @Squishy said:

    @wim said:
    See. This kind of talk is why I just can't get up any enthusiasm for NAM captures, no matter how good people say they are. Merde, I don't want to go fishing in the file system for different captures every time I want to try a different set of settings. I just wanna tweak some knobs.

    To each their own, but every single time I go back to try to get along with the concept, I walk away scratching my head at why it appeals to so many ... though I fully appreciate that it does.

    The good news is it costs me nothing to keep trying, and after I float happily back to my chosen few amp sims, I'm more sure than ever that they're the right choice for me.

    It's good for helping to keep me from actually practicing though. I'll give it that. 😉

    So it’s not the sounds from NAM you don’t like, it’s the process. Hmmm…gives me an idea. What if there was an app/plugin that was NAM based AND used knobs. For examples sake, let’s say a basic amp that just has a gain and tone knob. The app would be loaded with captures that have the various configurations of the gain and tone (G1T5, G5T7, etc). When you turn the knob, it internally switches to the capture that has the combo you turned to. Maybe something like that would be more enticing for you to use? I know I’d dig it. I have a capture collection of the Chase Bliss Brothers Analogman pedal that’s like a hundred different captures. I love the way it sounds but it’s such a slog to menu dive through all the different statics that I don’t use it very much, so I definitely understand where you’re coming from 🤙

    This is essentially what Gigfast does.

  • @Squishy said:

    @wim said:
    See. This kind of talk is why I just can't get up any enthusiasm for NAM captures, no matter how good people say they are. Merde, I don't want to go fishing in the file system for different captures every time I want to try a different set of settings. I just wanna tweak some knobs.

    To each their own, but every single time I go back to try to get along with the concept, I walk away scratching my head at why it appeals to so many ... though I fully appreciate that it does.

    The good news is it costs me nothing to keep trying, and after I float happily back to my chosen few amp sims, I'm more sure than ever that they're the right choice for me.

    It's good for helping to keep me from actually practicing though. I'll give it that. 😉

    So it’s not the sounds from NAM you don’t like, it’s the process. Hmmm…gives me an idea. What if there was an app/plugin that was NAM based AND used knobs. For examples sake, let’s say a basic amp that just has a gain and tone knob. The app would be loaded with captures that have the various configurations of the gain and tone (G1T5, G5T7, etc). When you turn the knob, it internally switches to the capture that has the combo you turned to. Maybe something like that would be more enticing for you to use? I know I’d dig it. I have a capture collection of the Chase Bliss Brothers Analogman pedal that’s like a hundred different captures. I love the way it sounds but it’s such a slog to menu dive through all the different statics that I don’t use it very much, so I definitely understand where you’re coming from 🤙

    Gigfast Lite’s internal models are parametric NAM captures of real amps. Parametric captures capture the knob dynamics across the knobs’ entire range. It comes at the cost of some extra CPU cycles.

  • @maxxpower18 @espiegel123
    Oh no way! Guess I need to check that one out again then, see if it suits me. Be cool if they updated to A2 of course.

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