Yes, "you me too" as we say in german.bmanic wrote:Exactly! Just use whatever plugins I like and you'll be 1337.shogger wrote: Yeah cool! Don't use your ears. bmanic likes it. That's all you need.
Shogger![]()
Cheers!
bManic
Shogger
Yes, "you me too" as we say in german.bmanic wrote:Exactly! Just use whatever plugins I like and you'll be 1337.shogger wrote: Yeah cool! Don't use your ears. bmanic likes it. That's all you need.
Shogger![]()
Cheers!
bManic
Thanks for posting this - I couldn't get to the location in the first post either.bootsie wrote:> Here is some tmp alternative download location <
Sorry for the inconvenience and glad you liked that plug so far.
Please don't redistribute this plug on your own.
thanks,
bootsie
Just make sure you use the +3 +6 +9 and "auto" buttons, then also you can insert a gain plugin in the chain before Tessla (for instance Sonalksis FreeG) to boost the input. You can also add several Tessla plugins in series to "learn" what it does. Heck, I even thought it sounded rather good with 4 Tessla's in a row.. but that's me, I'm insane.Integratron wrote: I'll have to work with TesslaSE more. Either the effect is so subtle, I'm not feeling it, or I'm not together with the basic operation. (Testing with some Mayall/Clapton Bluesbreakers tunes).
I wonder what 4 bmanics in a row sound like..bmanic wrote:Just make sure you use the +3 +6 +9 and "auto" buttons, then also you can insert a gain plugin in the chain before Tessla (for instance Sonalksis FreeG) to boost the input. You can also add several Tessla plugins in series to "learn" what it does. Heck, I even thought it sounded rather good with 4 Tessla's in a row.. but that's me, I'm insane.Integratron wrote: I'll have to work with TesslaSE more. Either the effect is so subtle, I'm not feeling it, or I'm not together with the basic operation. (Testing with some Mayall/Clapton Bluesbreakers tunes).
Cheers!
bManic
We know.bmanic wrote:I'm insane.
OK - now that you mention it I did notice a difference when I pushed these buttons but seemed to only change the gain.bmanic wrote:Just make sure you use the +3 +6 +9 and "auto" buttons, then also you can insert a gain plugin in the chain before Tessla (for instance Sonalksis FreeG) to boost the input. You can also add several Tessla plugins in series to "learn" what it does. Heck, I even thought it sounded rather good with 4 Tessla's in a row.. but that's me, I'm insane.Integratron wrote: I'll have to work with TesslaSE more. Either the effect is so subtle, I'm not feeling it, or I'm not together with the basic operation. (Testing with some Mayall/Clapton Bluesbreakers tunes).
Cheers!
bManic
I had the same experience with my one use of it on a similar application. I did have to be careful not to turn it up too far though or else the low end of the guitar would become audibly saturated, but at about the halfway point it did wonders for this one track.shogger wrote:OK, driving it to quite some extent can give interesting results. I had it on two acoustic guitars yesterday and it made the recordings sound subtly smoother and more consistent in a way that reminds me of old analog recordings. (Boah, tons of buzz words but I've got no other words that say to me what I hear.)
But by just putting it on some tracks with nothing changed I simply heard nothing. Thus the ABX test hint. I had to, well, actually do what the manual says!![]()
rosllow wrote:any chance you could upload this again ? the page its hosted on has a "bandwidth exceeded" message.
rosllow.
bootsie wrote:> Here is some tmp alternative download location <
Sorry for the inconvenience and glad you liked that plug so far.
Please don't redistribute this plug on your own.
thanks,
bootsie
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