We do it the same way as with Helix, Axe-FX, etc.
Basically, we take the Agoura amp model and send it thru the IR of the cab we mic'd the amp with (there are four cab options in this pack, so, for example, the '76 Marshall 1960A), and then we EQ match the amp model + IR cab to the real amp thru the same cab. That EQ match then gets baked into the IR of the cab, so the resulting IR is basically the IR of the '76 Marshall cab, plus whatever EQ match is necessary to make the whole thing sound like the real amp+cab.
Most of the time, when I take the amp model of the target amp (or something very close) and run it through the cab IR that we mic'd the real amp with, the tones are very, very close. So, ideally, the tone/EQ match process doesn't have to do much to really close the gap. In the case of the Agoura Plexi and the real 1959 Modified amp, once I ran the Agoura model thru the appropriate cab IR, it was VERY difficult to hear the difference. So the EQ match didn't do a ton. But it does add a little extra sauce to make the stock amp model sound like the real amp. I wouldn't say that it makes the Agoura model sound *better* than running it through your
For Helix, we've done this process to a lot of amps that aren't in the unit as stock models - stuff like a Matchless Chieftain or Benson Chimera. We're not planning to do that with the Stadium. We really want to wait until Proxy is available and just start capturing our amp catalog.
But I would like to explore matching amps models that we have the real-world amp equivalents, which would include:
- 1967 Deluxe Reverb (with original 12" Oxford)
- 1964 AC30 (with original Alnico silver's)
- '02 Korg-era AC30/6 Top Boost (with alnico blue's)
- Bogner Ecstasy
- '65 Princeton (non-reverb)
I'm definitely going to experiment with the'67 Deluxe and the Korg-era Vox. I'm not sure the '64 will be a close match, since the Agoura AC30 isn't their vintage '60's AC30, so it won't be as close of a match. Same with the Princeton - the Agoura model is a bit different than the blackface thing I have.
It's a lot of fun to experiment with this, though. Our tone match presets very much rely on the underlying amp modeling, and with the improvements in Agoura amp modeling, they are a significant improvement on Stadium.