When you open Guitar Rig these days, what’s usually the goal, tone shaping, movement, or mood?
When we open Guitar Rig in the studio, our primary goal is to craft emotions. Guitar Rig is our go-to for injecting some soul into our productions, especially when it comes to basslines that feel full, rich, and almost alive, like they’re carrying the weight of the track. We use it to add warmth or crispiness and character.
For example, we’ll run a synth bass through an amp to give it that gritty, organic depth, or layer on the Tape Delay to evoke a nostalgic, human feel. While tone shaping and movement are part of the process – using effects like Delays or panning to add life – these serve the bigger goal of emotional impact.
We’re not just tweaking knobs we’re asking, ‘Does this bassline make you feel something? Does it drive the mood?’ Guitar Rig’s versatility lets us chase that emotional core, whether we’re building a melancholic intro or a peak-time drop, but especially when our productions need an analog indie/rock touch – it’s an incredibly helpful tool.
The Adana Twins suggest trying: Duplicate your bass track or create a return track for parallel processing. Keep the original bass mono for clarity. Apply effects like delays or modulation to the secondary “stereo bass” track and automate them to add dynamic depth and texture.