I know the talk of the town is the reissue of the Mk IIc+, but I was lucky enough to acquire an old school DRGX Mk IIc+ a few months ago, and it gave me the fever for a similar amp with modern features like the JP2C. I put together this video comparison of a short little thing I put together to see how they are similar and/or different.
I actually started this a few months back with the backing track and rhythm guitars, and just got lazy about finishing up. I finally hooked up a foot pedal to my head switcher and put down a lead in one take just switching between the amps as the rhythm guitars changed.
My method was to lay down three tracks of rhythm guitars mixed identically. No EQ or additional processing besides a bit of compression, EQ, and limiter on the mix bus. I ran each group to a summing folder (bus), and muted one and then the other over different parts of the song. To simplify getting the lead track on video, I just used a foot switch on my head switcher to change the lead amp to coincide with the active rhythm guitars.
Give it a listen and let me know if you have aa preference. I didn’t do any talking with or even an intro, just wanted to show what it sounds like in the context of a mix.
I actually started this a few months back with the backing track and rhythm guitars, and just got lazy about finishing up. I finally hooked up a foot pedal to my head switcher and put down a lead in one take just switching between the amps as the rhythm guitars changed.
My method was to lay down three tracks of rhythm guitars mixed identically. No EQ or additional processing besides a bit of compression, EQ, and limiter on the mix bus. I ran each group to a summing folder (bus), and muted one and then the other over different parts of the song. To simplify getting the lead track on video, I just used a foot switch on my head switcher to change the lead amp to coincide with the active rhythm guitars.
Give it a listen and let me know if you have aa preference. I didn’t do any talking with or even an intro, just wanted to show what it sounds like in the context of a mix.