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Cookin' Drum Loop

Posted: Fri Feb 05, 2010 4:14 pm
by Sockgazer
Picture this: you and your buddies have a band. You’ve been gigging around town and are making a name for yourselves. It’s time to start doing some serious songwriting and get that first CD done. You grab your guitar and your GX108 and drive over to the bass player’s house. He’s got the PC up and running and a cookin’ drum loop is coming from the soundcard. Using the tape inputs, he hooks up the left soundcard output to your GX108 and the right out to his BX108, and plugs a tape out from each amp into the soundcard inputs. He briefly explains his song idea then sets the PC in record and off you go. After a couple takes, you’ve got good guide tracks for a new song. You save it, email it to your keyboard player and your singer, and start working on the next tune…
That’s just one example of the many ways you can effectively use our new practice combos. You can also use them for small, unplugged gigs. Or, if you play keyboards, to give those bass or guitar samples an extra touch of realism for your demos or MIDI productions.
Of course, you can also simply practice with them. And don’t leave home without one: it’s about the best thing you can have along on tour for warming up before the gig or keeping your chops up in the hotel room on a day off.


http://www.behringer.de/EN/Products/GX108.aspx

Is it wrong that I find this absolutely hilarious? Good old Behringer. I guess it's tough to make crappy little SS amps sound cool.

Re: Cookin' Drum Loop

Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 8:01 am
by Gilmourish
wtf???

Re: Cookin' Drum Loop

Posted: Wed Feb 10, 2010 4:31 am
by MannequinRaces
Sockgazer wrote:
Picture this: you and your buddies have a band. You’ve been gigging around town and are making a name for yourselves. It’s time to start doing some serious songwriting and get that first CD done. You grab your guitar and your GX108 and drive over to the bass player’s house. He’s got the PC up and running and a cookin’ drum loop is coming from the soundcard. Using the tape inputs, he hooks up the left soundcard output to your GX108 and the right out to his BX108, and plugs a tape out from each amp into the soundcard inputs. He briefly explains his song idea then sets the PC in record and off you go. After a couple takes, you’ve got good guide tracks for a new song. You save it, email it to your keyboard player and your singer, and start working on the next tune…
That’s just one example of the many ways you can effectively use our new practice combos. You can also use them for small, unplugged gigs. Or, if you play keyboards, to give those bass or guitar samples an extra touch of realism for your demos or MIDI productions.
Of course, you can also simply practice with them. And don’t leave home without one: it’s about the best thing you can have along on tour for warming up before the gig or keeping your chops up in the hotel room on a day off.


http://www.behringer.de/EN/Products/GX108.aspx

Is it wrong that I find this absolutely hilarious? Good old Behringer. I guess it's tough to make crappy little SS amps sound cool.


I agree, freaking hilarious! You have to give them kudos for trying though! No wonder its discontinued! :lol: