The information in this documentation is subject to change without notice and does not represent a commitment on the part of Steinberg
Media Technologies AG.
The software described by this document is subject to a License Agreement and may not be copied to other media.
No part of this publication may be copied, reproduced, or otherwise
transmitted or recorded, for any purpose, without prior written permission by Steinberg Media Technologies AG. All product and company
names are ™ or ® trademarks of their respective owners.
OSQ (“Original Sound Quality“) is a lossless audio compression format. Copyright by Philippe Goutier 2001. OSQ is a native WaveLab
format.
5The success story continues …
6Congratulations!
7How do I use Virtual Guitarist?
7What is Virtual Guitarist?
8How does Virtual Guitarist work?
9What you can and can’t do with Virtual Guitarist
9Register your software!
10Optimizing the hard disk before installation
10System requirements (PC version)
11Installing Virtual Guitarist (PC version)
12System requirements (Mac version)
12Installing Virtual Guitarist (Mac version)
13Setting up Virtual Guitarist as a VST instrument
in your host application
15First test
15How to play Virtual Guitarist
16Players
18Parts
19Chord recognition
22Latch mode
22Expression and timing variations
28Sound variations
31Multi-effect board
42Plug-in version of the effect board
44MIDI controller assignments
46Global settings (setup)
53Bonus feature: creating your own phrasings
55Reference
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The success story continues …
The overwhelming success of our Virtual Guitarist VSTi released in
April 2002 almost automatically lead to people asking for more players.
Especially in the field of electric guitars styles there is such a vast
range of sounds, styles, eras and musical styles. It was impossible to
cover all these with one electric guitar that was just one part of a hybrid
acoustic/electric guitarist.
Simply to release more players wouldn’t have done the job as we
found out while laying out the Electric Edition. To just add additional
players to the original VG would just not have been enough. Also, if
you focus on electric guitars, you can’t ignore the issue of effects
being an integral part of the game. Guitar, amp, speaker and effect are
inseparable.
Therefore we decided the Electric Edition had to become a full-blown
product in its own right—with special advanced features to meet the
requirements for electric guitar sounds. With the programmable Multi
FX Board seamlessly integrated, a perfectly sounding, flexible rhythm
guitarist is just a push of a button away. On top you get a range of
first-class guitar effects in a separate plug-in that you can use for any
audio track.
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Apart from the totally new design, the Multi FX Board and the new 29
players we have changed very little—we want owners of the original
Virtual Guitarist to be surprised only by the new sounds and styles,
not by an unfamiliar user interface.
Before we start, I sincerely want to thank and praise the person who
was confident enough to let us capture his extraordinary guitar playing
and instrument/amp collection in VG Electric Edition: professional
session guitarist Thomas Blug. A similar incorporation of playing skills,
perfectionism and feel for sound associated with an incredible stylistic
versatility is hard to find—we’re all lucky we did, and you’re too.
I strongly believe you’ll have a lot of pleasure, fun and success with
Virtual Guitarist “Electric Edition”!
Yours sincerely,
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Congratulations!
Virtual Guitarist is your own personal rhythm guitarist, letting you
choose between 29 guitar players, each of which is a perfectionist:
perfect sound, perfect timing, and the ability to flexibly adapt to suit
most musical styles.
Using Virtual Guitarist you can easily add professional-sounding
rhythm guitar tracks to your songs, without the need for a real player,
and get a perfect take every time. Even if you use real guitarists in your
music as well, Virtual Guitarist has the big advantage of enabling you
to experiment with rhythm guitar parts at any time, and in any place,
without the need for special recording equipment. You could even be
laying down tracks on your laptop computer while flying to Mongolia.
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How do I use Virtual Guitarist?
Using Virtual Guitarist is simple, especially if you think of the plug-in as
a real rhythm guitar player—tell them what to play and they will play it.
The playing is precise and the guitarist won’t complain, which, aside
from the clever programming, is a worldwide first in itself!
Virtual Guitarist is used exactly like any other VST Instrument:
•Prepare a track and load Virtual Guitarist.
•Select a player from the menu.
•Use a MIDI keyboard to trigger the Virtual Guitarist or, alternatively, manually
add the chords to a MIDI track via the sequencer’s editor.
•Swap guitars, throw in fills or long chords, and improve your guitar track until
you’re happy with it. You can change any parameter at a later time, and, in contrast to recording "real” guitars, you can change the key of the song at any
time without having to repeat the whole recording session!
What is Virtual Guitarist?
Technically speaking, Virtual Guitarist is a set of two VST Instruments
containing a variety of rhythm guitar styles. Each style is represented
by a player, and is ready-to-go with the correct guitar, microphone or
amp, and a selection of phrasing controls.
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Musically speaking, Virtual Guitarist plays itself, and all you have to do
is play the chord and key progressions via a MIDI keyboard. You can
control the phrasing, sound, and many other play parameters, using
either the mouse, or by triggering them in real time by using a MIDI
controller. This enables you to adapt the rhythm guitar to seamlessly
work within your song, and in any given musical style.
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How does Virtual Guitarist work?
To clear up a common misconception, Virtual Guitarist doesn’t use
common single-note samples or synthesis to imitate guitars. The result
would be extremely artificial, and if you’ve ever tried to simulate guitar
playing on a MIDI keyboard, you’ll know exactly what we’re talking
about.
Perhaps surprisingly, the Virtual Guitarist concept is actually much simpler and is based on a huge library of audio tracks recorded by real living and breathing (not to mention drinking) guitar players. This means
the result really is a genuine guitar recording—and not an artificial
approximation.
Virtual Guitarist’s ground-breaking approach makes it possible to
select from these recordings in real time when you change a chord or
any other parameter. Tempo changes are no problem as the guitar
recordings have been processed in a way that enables all the beats to
be triggered individually. And, in addition, you can manually shuffle the
individual beats to create your own parts—the eight parts you can
select from for each player are all examples of what’s possible, which
we’ll look more closely at later.
In Virtual Guitarist “Electric Edition”, the output signal of “guitar and
amp” gets fed into the FX section— just like in real life. Here the sound
gets beefed up using Wahwah, AutoFilter, Chorus, Flanger, Phaser,
Tremolo and Delay.
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What you can and can’t do with Virtual Guitarist
Virtual Guitarist has many advantages when compared with a real
guitar player:
•The virtual guitar players are convenient and available at any time.
•Using a virtual guitarist is cheap and easy, especially since you won’t need a
studio to record in.
•You can save time because there’s no setup, tuning, preparation, microphone
positioning, or audio recording.
•Virtual guitarists don’t play wrong notes and there isn’t going to be any timing
problems.
•You can work with several guitar players simultaneously.
•You have complete control over the sound and phrasing of the guitar.
•Virtual Guitarist supports your creativity, allowing you to experiment as much
as you want, and giving you the possibility of creating tracks that couldn’t be
played on a "real” guitar.
•It’s possible to make alterations at any stage, even after recording or during
the mixing process. You can change the instrument, phrasing, and sound without having to recreate the chord data from scratch.
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Despite all of these advantages, it’s important to remember that
Virtual Guitarist is a computer program and will inevitably have some
disadvantages when compared to a real player. It would be impossible for Virtual Guitarist to provide everything a real guitarist might theoretically be able to offer, although the included virtual players do
cover a broad range of musical styles capable of suiting most needs.
Register your software!
Before getting carried away with the software, which we’re sure you
will do, please take a moment to complete and return the registration
card enclosed with Virtual Guitarist. This will entitle you to technical
support, and we’ll also keep you up to date with the latest news and
updates.
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Optimizing the hard disk before installation
Virtual Guitarist installs 1.6 GB of data on your hard disk, and if your
drive is quite full, or has not been defragmented recently, it’s possible
that the install data will get split (fragmented) into many parts over the
disk. Although it won’t affect the performance of the plug-in, it can
lead to longer loading times of the players, which can become very
frustrating.
To optimize the loading times, we recommend you defragment the
hard disk you want to install Virtual Guitarist on before you start. This
can be done with the defragmentation system software on Windows,
or with Norton Utilities (or another defragmentation program) on the
Macintosh.
System requirements (PC version)
To run Virtual Guitarist you’ll need at least:
•A PC with a 400 MHz Pentium® II processor, or compatible AMD processor
•256 MB RAM (512 MB recommended)
•1.6 GB of free hard disk space
•Windows® 98, Windows® ME, Windows® 2000, or Windows® XP
•Cubase VST 5.1, Cubase SX/SL, Nuendo 1.5, or another VST 2.0 compatible
host application
❐
Please also observe the system requirements of your host application.
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Installing Virtual Guitarist (PC version)
To install Virtual Guitarist on your PC:
1. Switch the computer on and wait for Windows to load.
2. Insert the Virtual Guitarist CD-ROM 1 into your computer.
3. Open the Windows Explorer, or the “My Computer” window, and
double-click on the CD-ROM drive icon.
4. Double-click the Virtual Guitarist Installer icon to run the installation
program, and follow the on-screen instructions.
Removing Virtual Guitarist (PC version)
To remove Virtual Guitarist from your computer:
1. Open the “Add or Remove Programs” control panel.
2. Select Virtual Guitarist and click “Add/Remove”.
3. Follow the on-screen instructions.
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System requirements (Mac version)
To run Virtual Guitarist you’ll need at least:
•A Power Macintosh® with a 500 MHz G3 processor and 100 MHz bus
•256 MB RAM (512 MB recommended)
•1.6 GB of free hard disk space
•Mac OS® 9.x or Mac OS® X
•Cubase VST 5.1, Cubase SX/SL, Nuendo 1.5, or another VST 2.0 compatible
host application
❐
Please also observe the system requirements of your host application.
Installing Virtual Guitarist (Mac version)
To install Virtual Guitarist on your Mac:
1. Switch on your computer and insert the Virtual Guitarist CD-ROM 1.
2. If the CD window doesn’t open automatically, double-click the
Virtual Guitarist icon.
3. Double-click the Virtual Guitarist Installer icon to run the installation
program, and follow the on-screen instructions.
Removing Virtual Guitarist (Mac version)
To remove Virtual Guitarist from your computer:
1. Run the Virtual Guitarist Installer again (as described above) and select
“Uninstall” (from the pop-up located at the top left) when prompted.
2. Select the program component you want to remove and click
“Uninstall”.
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Setting up Virtual Guitarist as a VST instrument
in your host application
This section describes how to setup Virtual Guitarist with Cubase VST
as your host application. However, the same procedure applies to most
host applications, and you should consult your host’s documentation if
you need further help.
Make sure the host program has been correctly installed and setup to
work with your MIDI and audio hardware (eg. a MIDI keyboard and a
sound card).
To setup Virtual Guitarist:
1. Open the VST Instruments window.
2. Click the “No VST Instrument” label. In the pop-up menu choose the
folder Virtual Guitarist, select “VG Electric Edition”.
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❐
The image shows the folder content with both the original Virtual Guitarist and
VG Electric Edition installed.
3. Open the Virtual Guitarist window by clicking the Virtual Guitarist’s
Edit button in the VST Instruments window.
4. Select a Player from the plug-in window’s toolbar. This is described in
more detail on page 15.
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5. In the VST host application, select “VG Electric Edition” as the output
for a MIDI track, and make sure this track can receive MIDI data from
your MIDI keyboard.
❐
Please note that when you activate Virtual Guitarist or change the currently
selected player, the relevant data has to be loaded into the computer’s RAM
(memory) before the instrument is ready to be played.
Latency
Although Virtual Guitarist is practically latency-free, high latency times
(which result in delays between pressing keys on your MIDI keyboard
and hearing a sound) can occur when you play Virtual Guitarist via
your MIDI keyboard in real time.
This is often caused by the audio card or the MIDI interface, although it
won’t be an issue when playing back a song with a Virtual Guitarist
MIDI track. To get rid of annoying real time latency, we recommend you
to replace your current audio card with a professional audio card for
which an ASIO driver is available. Most soundcards built into off-theshelf computers don’t use an ASIO driver and usually produce latencies
of up to several hundred milliseconds.
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First test
At this point, you’re probably itching to get your hands on Virtual
Guitarist “Electric Edition”, so:
1. Activate Virtual Guitarist (as described in the previous section) and
load a player. In the Virtual Guitarist window, click the “Latch” button
to activate the parameter.
2. Play a chord or note on your MIDI keyboard, and Virtual Guitarist will
start to play. Because we activated the “Latch” button, playback will
continue when you release the key(s).
3. If you have a sustain pedal connected to your MIDI keyboard, press it
to stop the Virtual Guitarist.
If you don’t have a sustain pedal, you can assign the “stop” function to
a note on your MIDI keyboard. For more information about this, check
out the “Remote keys” section on page 23.
❐
The MIDI LED in the Virtual Guitarist window lights up when Virtual Guitarist
receives MIDI-Events.
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How to play Virtual Guitarist
There are several ways of playing the Virtual Guitarist:
•You can play chords and vary the expression using keyboard velocity, MIDI
controllers, the sustain pedal, and program changes.
•If you’re not familiar with a keyboard, you can enter chords and other MIDI
events using one of the editor’s provided by your sequencer software.
•You can use Virtual Guitarist to dub the chord tracks of existing songs and
MIDI files to improve the way they sound. Many commercial MIDI files include
special chord tracks, although duplicating a typical "Pad sound” track (such
as strings) with the Virtual Guitarist will usually produce good results.
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Multiple Virtual Guitarists
You can use as many Virtual Guitarists simultaneously as your host
application and computer allow. There’s nothing wrong in using two
rock guitar tracks at the same time with different phrasing, and then
throwing in an additional riff from a third VG instance here and there.
Players
In Virtual Guitarist terminology, a player is a guitarist with a unique style.
However, more than just a style or rhythm, each Virtual Guitarist player
refers to particular guitar, sound (amp, speaker, etc.), and dedicated
playing style.
❐
When a player is selected, up to 200 MB of sounds are loaded into your
computer’s RAM, which can often take quite a while. If the wait is too long, you
can use the chord set option to decrease loading time, although this reduces
the number of chords available. (See the “Chord Set” section on page 47 for
more information).
Selecting a player
•To select a player, click the small downward-pointing arrow on the
Virtual Guitarist’s plug-in window, and choose from the pop-up menu.
The loading status is indicated in the "sound hole”, as illustrated below.
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•You can also use the left and right arrows window to switch between
players, but this isn’t recommended because of the long loading times.
❐
The loading status in the "sound hole” (as pictured above) is only visible if the
Virtual Guitarist window is open.
❐
After loading, a picture of the original guitar used for the recording is visible in
the “sound hole”.
Removing a player
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To reload a player (for example, if you wish to change from the XXL to
the ECO set—see the “Chord Set” section on page 47 for more information), you must first remove it from memory. It’s important to note that
you can’t simply reselect the player from the pop-up menu as nothing
will happen.
•To remove the current player from memory, select “nothing loaded” in
the player pop-up menu, and then select the previous player again.
Auditioning players
When you start working with Virtual Guitarist, you’ll want to become
familiar with what each player sounds like. To help you with this we’ve
included a short audio clip of each player, which can be found in the
“Prelisten” folder on the Virtual Guitarist CD 1. Using your computer’s
audio player (such as QuickTime or Windows Media Player), you can
easily preview a player before loading it.
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Parts
Each player offers up to eight different parts. A part is variation—varying in rhythmic phrasing, note structure (e.g. single notes, chords,
octaves) and effect setting. You can either play the same part all the
time, or switch parts while playing to add variation to a track.
Selecting parts
You can select a part by clicking one of the two part selection arrows
in the top left corner of the Virtual Guitarist window.
Switching parts in real time
You can switch between parts while you play without any glitches, and
one way of doing this is to send a MIDI program change message (from
one to eight) from a MIDI keyboard. The program change number corresponds to the part number.
❐
Alternatively, you can switch between parts using certain notes on your MIDI
keyboard. For more information about this, read both the “Key Remote Octave”
section on page 47, and the “Remote keys” section on page 23.
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Chord recognition
Virtual Guitarist contains an intelligent chord recognition system, which
always plays the correct chord based on the MIDI input from a sequencer or MIDI keyboard in real time. The MIDI input can consist of a complete chord or simple one-finger notes—you don’t need to make any
special settings because Virtual Guitarist will always know what to do.
Playing chords
If you play a complete chord (for example, the notes C, F, and G for a
Csus chord), Virtual Guitarist will automatically recognize it.
ENGLISH
•For the best possible chord recognition,
played. Playing three notes is sufficient for major, minor or sus4 chords, but
for other chord types (maj7, 7, 6, dim, mmaj7, m7, m6, m7-5, sus2 and 7sus4)
you need to play all four notes.
Chord inversions
In most cases, it doesn’t matter what inversion of a chord you play.
However, there are some exceptions where the bass note has to be
the root or tonic note:
•m7. For example, in Am7 the A must be the bass note because Virtual Guitarist
would otherwise interpret the chord as a sixth (C6, in this case)—although the
chord uses the same notes on the keyboard, it sounds totally different on the
guitar.
•dim chords (for example, Adim uses the same notes as Cdim, Eb-dim and
Gb-dim).
•+5 chords (A+5 uses the same notes as C#+5 and F+5).
•m6 chords (Am6 shares the same notes as F#m7-5).
all
the notes of a chord must be
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One-finger chords
For the chord types major, 7, minor, and m7, you don’t actually need to
play all the notes in the chord. Although playing a single note always
indicates a major chord, you can indicate a different chord type by
playing an additional key.
Additional keyChord
Nonemajor
Next left white key7
Next left black keyminor
Next left white and black keysminor7
❐
For keyboard schemes see “Chord reference” section on page 55.
Chord display
The chord display shows the currently playing or pre-selected chord. If
the chord you play can’t be found or is missing in the current chord
set, Virtual Guitarist will automatically choose the most appropriate
replacement chord (indicated in the chord display). This will also be
the case when the chord isn’t available just because you’ve selected
the MID or ECO chord set.
❐
By setting the “Chord Display” parameter in the setup window (see the “Display
Chords as” section on page 52 for more information), you can specify whether
chords names are displayed with flats or sharps.
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Players and chords
You’ll soon discover that the selection of available chords depends on
which player you have selected. Some players only offer neutral
chords. But it’s no problem to control this type of player from a MIDI
track containing more complex chords—Virtual Guitarist automatically
selects the most appropriate chords from the available selection.
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Latch mode
Latch mode sets whether the Virtual Guitarist continues to play when
you release the keys on your MIDI keyboard. With latch mode on, the
Virtual Guitarist plays continuously from the moment you play the first
key, until you manually force a stop by using the stop button of your
sequencer, the sustain pedal, or by playing the B remote key.
If you only want to play a lick here and there, set latch mode to off and
Virtual Guitarist will only play while the keys are held down on your
MIDI keyboard.
You can find more information about using remote keys and the sustain pedal on page 24.
Expression and timing variations
Virtual Guitarist offers a number of functions for adjusting the playing
style and to create variations.
Accents and syncopation
If you play the notes on your MIDI keyboard quite forcefully (which will
result in a high MIDI note velocity value), Virtual Guitarist will play the
chord in a syncopated style. This means that the chord will only be
played on the weak beats, with the chord on the strong beats being
omitted.
For information about setting the velocity where Virtual Guitarist starts
treating chords as being syncopated, take a look at the “Velocity
Switch” section on page 35.
❐
To make Virtual Guitarist revert back to a normal (unsyncopated) playing style,
simply play another note or chord with a lighter touch.
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Long chords
You can also use Virtual Guitarist to play long (sustained) chords.
•To play long chords, press the sustain pedal and play the chords as
normal on your MIDI keyboard.
There are two types of long chords, triggered by different MIDI note
velocities:
•A light key stroke produces a slowly strummed chord (not available in all
players).
•A stronger key stroke produces a heavy chord.
If you don’t have a sustain pedal, you can assign this function to the Bkey of your MIDI keyboard’s remote octave. For more information
about how to do this, look at the “Remote keys” section on page 23,
and the “Key Remote Octave” section on page 47.
Fills
While the Virtual Guitarist is playing, you can trigger a fill (a little variation of the current part) by using the modulation wheel on your MIDI
keyboard. Simply turn the modulation wheel forwards and back, and
Virtual Guitarist will play a fill before carrying on with the normal groove.
ENGLISH
❐
If you don’t want to use the modulation wheel to trigger a fill, you can assign
this function to another MIDI controller in the setup window—see the “Fill
Trigger” section on page 49 for more information.
You can also trigger a fill by pressing the A# key on the remote octave
of your MIDI keyboard, and you can find out more about this in the
next section and in the “Key Remote Octave” section on page 47.
Remote keys
With Virtual Guitarist’s remote keys, you can use an octave of your
MIDI keyboard (the remote octave) as a remote control for the most
important playback variations. The remote keys are especially useful if
your MIDI keyboard doesn’t have program change buttons or a sustain pedal, although it’s important to remember that Virtual Guitarist’s
remote keys and controllers can be active simultaneously.
English23
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The keys for the remote octave are mapped out with the following
functions:
KeyFunctionDescription
C to GParts one to eightSelects a Part
G#Fret noiseAdds fret noise
AStop noiseTriggers a stop noise
A#Fill triggerTriggers a fill
BSustain pedalSame effect as using the sustain pedal
❐
You can select which octave on your MIDI keyboard is used as the remote
octave in the setup window’s key remote octave section (see page 47).
Sustain pedal
The sustain pedal has an important function in Virtual Guitarist, and it
works differently depending on whether latch mode is activated or not.
❐
If you don’t have a sustain pedal, you can simulate it by using the B-key in the
remote octave instead (as described in the previous section).
Try experimenting with the functions described in the table below to
get an understanding of how you can use the sustain pedal.
Latch Mode On Stop functionVirtual Guitarist will stop playing if you press
Latch Mode Off Sustain pedalVirtual Guitarist will stop playing as soon as
If Virtual Guitarist is not playing and you hold down the sustain pedal,
notes played on the keyboard will result in single long chords, instead
of starting VG’s rhythm playing as usual. (See the “Long chords” section on page 23 for more information.)
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the sustain pedal during playback.
you release the keys played on the MIDI keyboard, unless you release the keys while the
pedal is down. (This is similar to how the sustain pedal works when playing a piano instrument on a keyboard, for example.)
Tempo
Virtual Guitarist automatically adapts itself to the tempo of the current
song, which is setup in the host application (such as Cubase). Virtual
Guitarist will also automatically follow tempo changes during playback,
like an accelerando, for example.
However, the slowest song tempo that Virtual Guitarist plays correctly
at is 70 bpm (beats per minute). With high shuffle values (see the next
page), the minimum tempo played back correctly is slightly higher. The
slowest tempo for perfect triplets (Shuffle 66.7%) is 85 bpm. However,
there are no upper limits to Virtual Guitarist’s tempo—except for taste!
Tempo section
You can set Virtual Guitarist to play at half- or double-speed, independently from the tempo of the current song, by clicking on the buttons
in the tempo section:
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HalfVirtual Guitarist’s tempo is halved in proportion to the tempo of the
current song.
NormalNormal tempo, which is the same as the tempo of the current song.
DoubleVirtual Guitarist’s tempo is doubled in proportion to the tempo of the
current song.
The green LEDs light up in 4/4 time signatures.
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Shuffle
The shuffle dial allows you to add a swing factor to the virtual guitarist’s playback, enabling you to fit the rhythmic feel more closely to your
song. Technically speaking, the shuffle dial sets how far the off-beats
are placed behind the eighth note positions—you can get Virtual Guitarist to play exact triplets by setting shuffle to 66.7%.
❐
If your music has a mostly triplet-based rhythmic feel, Virtual Guitarist will
sound better if you set shuffle to a slightly lower value than 66.7%—between
58% and 63% is usually a good starting point.
❐
There’s one exception from the shuffle rule: In parts 6-8 of the player “R’n’B:
Rock’n Roll” there’s already a shuffling of 66,6% at the minimum setting of the
control. This is because a straight pattern doesn’t make any sense here. By
turning the control up you can increase the shuffling to extreme values.
Timing accuracy
One of the great advantages of Virtual Guitarist is the timing is always
perfect and reliable. However, given that these two words are rarely
used to describe the timing of a real guitarist, Virtual Guitarist also
allows you to add some slight timing variations to make the guitar track
sound slightly more human.
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So, to alter the timing of the Virtual Guitarist, you can adjust the timing
dial, and the maximum deviation in milliseconds is displayed just below
the dial.
❐
The maximum timing deviation limit of 25 milliseconds is very modest and will
hardly be audible if only the virtual guitarist is playing. However, in conjunction
with other tracks, especially those that have been quantized, it will become
clearly noticeable.
Dynamics
The dynamics control is used to increase the amount of random volume change per beat, similar to a real musician who just cannot
deliver perfect dynamics.
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Decay
The Decay dial sets the decay time of the individual beats, which
enables the guitar track sound more “staccato” with shorter delay
times, or more fluid and “legato” with longer decay times.
•Note that the decay dial controls an envelope that shapes the playback of the
originally recorded guitar tracks. This means that your Virtual Guitarist tracks
won’t sound “natural” any more if you set the dial to the upper extremes.
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Sound variations
Stereo Width
The Stereo Width dial controls a DSP effect that sets the stereo width
of the output signal. With the dial in the normal position, the sound
remains unchanged. If the dial is set to the full left position, it produces
a monophonic signal, and if it’s set to the full right position, the stereo
width is doubled using a comb filter effect.
❐
Sound engineers will be happy to note that Virtual Guitarist’s stereo width
effect is fully mono compatible.
Track Doubling
In a recording studio, guitar tracks are often doubled as another way
to enhance the stereo image, and to produce a richer sound. To do
this, the guitar player must record the same track twice onto two separate tracks, which are panned left and right.
Virtual Guitarist doesn’t need two recordings to achieve this. Simply
activate the Doubling switch and, as if by magic, two guitar players will
play in unison.
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The doubling feature is not a DSP effect like the stereo width feature
because Virtual Guitarist literally plays back two different tracks. This
means that Virtual Guitarist’s doubling sounds exactly the same as the
conventional, but more cumbersome, doubling method.
❐
Be careful not to overuse stereo width and doubling. It might be tempting to
let each guitar track sound rich and fat, but it can lead to a bad final mix.
Sound adjustments
You can adjust the basic sound character of the guitar with the pickup selector and presence controls.
Mic Position
With this 4-way switch you can vary position and angle of the microphone in front of the amp speaker, resulting in a subtle phase-related
change of the sound character. Position A is the normal recording
position. Moving the slider towards position B virtually moves the
microphone away from the speaker and also changes its angle.
ENGLISH
Presence
A presence dial is found on most guitar amps, and its function is to
emphasize or dampen the upper-mid frequencies of the sound spectrum. Turning it upwards from the neutral mid position increases the
bite, while turning down produces a warmer guitar sound by damping
presence.
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Low Cut
To avoid frequency masking between your guitar tracks and other tracks
in the mix, it’s often a good idea to slightly reduce the low frequency
content of the guitar signal.
By turning the Low Cut control clockwise, you move the highpass filter
cutoff frequency from 0 Hz to up to 800 Hz. When VG is used within a
complex mix, the optimal position is somewhere between 9 and 10
o´clock. In higher positions the sound will become pretty thin and artificial, however we’ve provided this option for creative sound design.
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