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Warp VST
Can you really, really accurately simulate a
guitar amp in software? Ian Waugh grabs his plectrum and opens the
windows...
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info |
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From |
Steinberg |
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Web |
www.steinberguk.com
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www.steinberg.net
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Price |
£179.99 |
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Rating |
8/10 |
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We Like |
Plug 'n' go, sounds
like a guitar! |
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We don't Like |
A shade expensive,
only nine setups |
Needs: Pentium III 500MHz, 256Mb RAM, Windows 98 or
higher, Cubase VST 5.0 or higher, or compatible or VST 2-compatible
host software
One of the most difficult instruments to
satisfactorily simulate electronically is the electric guitar. It's
not just the sound of the guitar itself which is but a part of the
equation, but the essential tones and overtones added by the guitar
amp.
Warp VST is a guitar amp simulation. Okay, so they
aren't particularly new, but this one is based on Hughes & Kettner's
DSM (Dynamic Sector Modelling) technology that was used in the
World's first digitally modelled speaker cabinet way back in 2001.
It was specifically designed to recreate the sounds of amps of
yesteryear.
Model behaviour
Warp VST features three amp models and three speaker
cabinets. The amps include a clean Jazz Chorus, a 60's Plexi Tube
Head and a Warp Rectified amp. The cabinets are a Combo (12"
speaker, open housing), British (4 x 12" speakers from the 80s), and
Greenback (4 x 12" power speakers). Each amp can be used with any
cabinet a total, for the multiplicationally-challenged, of nine
combinations.
Being a plug-in, Warp VST integrates seamlessly with
any VST-compatible software. The nice thing is - and this applies to
all plug-in effects, of course - that you can record an electric
guitar and then try different amp and speaker combinations
afterwards.
The nine combinations may seem a little restrictive
but that will depend on what sounds you're after. And, to be fair,
preferences will be largely personal as most guitarists seem to have
their own preferred sounds anyway. (We do – ed)
And all that Jazz

Particularly impressive is the clean Jazz Chorus
sound with a warm chestnuts-roasting-on-an-open-fire tone. You can
tweak the settings, too, on all the amps with master, bass, mid and
treble controls.
Head bangers and Heavy Metal fans can thrash to the
Wave Rectifier, even if many consider it a little passé today.
(Never! - a Korn fan)
Perhaps the most uniformly enjoyable sound is the
Plexi Tube Head (try it with the Greenback speakers), which could be
used on a wide variety of recordings. Think Marshall Cab and a half
stack
You can, of course, use this with MIDI and
synthesised guitar lines (the source material must be converted to
audio first, though) so non-guitarists can also benefit by adding
additional realism to their guitar parts.
Summary
Warp VST is one of the most satisfying guitar amp
simulations yet to appear and it's probably not stretching the truth
to say it sets a new standard. Guitarists will love it and
non-guitarists wanting to make their guitar lines more interesting
and authentic will be currently hard-pushed to find better.
Ian Waugh
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