

The G5 also has a USB interface to allow you to record your guitar into your computer. The G5 doesn't have the most sophisticated looper, but it will let you make basic loops. I believe this would let you record a loop with a clean tone and then solo overtop of it with distortion, but I'm not 100% sure. You could also try a multi-effects pedal with a built-in looper, such as the Zoom G5. Leave the distortion pedal turned off when you record your loop, then turn it on when it's time to solo. I don't know about drum loops, but if you want to play clean chords through a looping pedal and then play a distorted solo overtop, one solution would be to plug your guitar into a distortion pedal, then plug the distortion pedal into the looper, then plug the looper into your amp. What could be a feasible solution? Are there pedals can play a drum base, playback a clean guitar play and then overdrive while I play the solo? So I just need one (and the only input) on the amp? I looked at some pedal that has both looper and drum sets, but, I was thinking that if I connect the pedal to the only input that the Katana 50 have, it will be ok when I play and record the clean base but I guess, when I set the amply to overdrive, it will be going to distort also the drums and the clean playback, so probably it is not a solution for me.
How to set up superior drummer in fl studio 7 how to#
I was starting to think about how to implement it. I would like to have a drum base at the bottom of it. What I would like to do is to use a looper to record clean chords progressing and then playback it in a loop a play a "distorted solo" over it. I have a quite cheap Boss Katana 50 amp, that for me is more than enough now. I'm a beginner with guitars, started to learn to play a few months ago, I now have a lovely G5422T and I couldn't be happier
