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A few thoughts here on guitar tone without an amp ... I have done some home recording and gotten some remarkable results using a Mesa Boogie V-Twin and the cheap version (sound tank) of an Ibanez Tube Screamer. I use the V-Twin in *clean* preamp mode and sweeten my strat tone by adding some bass, treble, and some presence. The output of that goes to the Tube Screamer. The added level and presence *before* the distortion of the Ibanez (which is by nature a mild overdrive) seems to generate a smooth raspiness from that little green and black box. The high end sounds kind of "tinkly" and seems to make the strat "talk" without sounding too rough or edgy. The setup seems to track my dynamics, and I get just enough thick saturation when I play with the neck pickup. The 'in-between' strat settings weigh in with a tad less saturation, which sounds wonderful to my ear, and leaves me room to kick up to the former more penetrating tone when the phrases of a building solo demand it. The rest of my chain (optional) consists of a Yamaha digital multi-effects box which I use *only* for its stereo chorus, and I keep the mix of that chorus very light (maybe 25%-30%). The Yamaha also has some 'amp simulations' and I select the one labeled 'M' (must mean Marshall!) which, stereotypically, seems to fatten the tone. I take the stereo outs of the Yamaha and feed them to my Lexicon Reflex, programmed for a relatively long (setting of 11 or 12) plate reverb and I adjust the Mix so that its not too wet. The sound through the headphones has been *amazing*, inspiring me to do my best tracking when I play on top of my sequenced compositions. The sound in the final mix is *very* convincing. It would be really hard to to know that I recorded without a speaker. The electronics in the chain really seem to respond to my playing, almost idiosyncratically, as if there were some real acoustic component to the sound. My folk theory: putting my tone into a 12AX7 preamp warms it up and giggles it a bit before the transistorized distortion. This giggled up tone, with added presence, drives the Ibanez in a more idiosyncratic way. The rest of my chain (all the chorus and reverb stuff) breathes more life and animation into the signal. I think the fact that each box acts as some function on the signal creates a whole that is greater in complexity than the sum of the parts. My ethic: fool around with stuff, experiment. One would not normally think (at least I didn't) of taking the signal from an expensive tube preamp ($300) set on clean and passing it into a cheap ($35) overdrive box. Experiment with what you have and try things that may not seem warranted by a 'hi-fi' components view of the world, in which the quality of a chain is considered to be its weakist link. This approach can be used for looping or recording. Mickey Angel