Utkinpaul wrote:she uses iPad iOS version of the app. So far we cannot find a good match there. It does not have a Diode Overdrive pedal, but most of other equipment matches Mac version. Any ideas of how to setup it? We have Hendrix and Fender bundles.
The iOS version of Hendrix has a JH Gold model, and the "4x12" A" cab model (i.e. "based on Marshall 4x12" Cabinet with 'Greenback' speakers") seems a suitable match. IMO, this should get close to a "generic Page" tone with something like the following settings:
Presence: 8.0
Bass: 0.5
Mid: 7.5
Treble: 5.7
Hi Treble Loudness 1: 7.0
Normal Loudness 2: 4.0
Normal/Hi Treble switch: Hi Treble
Bridge switch: Down (Page, didn't jump the inputs, but try the switch in the "Up" position if you like it better that way!).
You can try a little boost with the stock "Overdrive" stomp, if you like, though I don't think Page's Marshall tone should really need any boost. Likewise, play with the settings on the amp -- though I think generally Page has plenty of mids and highs, with much less bass.
The particular tones on the studio LP version of "Heartbreaker" are another thing, though. The main guitar parts for this were probably (IMO!) recorded (with a Telecaster) into a Rickenbacker Transonic 200 amp (solid-state!); cabs for those seem to have had various speaker configurations, but mixes of 12" and 15" Altec Lansing speakers seem common. He may have run through a Vox/Sola Sound Tonebender (Mk II) unit, though the Transonic would have also had a built in "fuzz" option (but since Page used Tonebenders elsewhere, perhaps that is most likely). There was apparently one close mic, and another w
aaay back. Then the
solo was apparently recorded
later, and may have been one of the first things for which Page used a Marshall.
Anyway, there is really nothing in AmpliTube iOS (or Desktop) that is (IMO) really very much like the Rick Transonic, its cabs with Altec-Lansing speakers, or Tonebender. Honestly, your guess is as good as mine!
Still, if I were trying to capture that vibe, I might start with one of the Fender models (maybe starting with the ’57 Custom Champ from the iOS Fender 2) set pretty clean but loud, and then pummeling it with one of the fuzz stomp models. The Fuzz Face is supposed to be (as I understand it) similar to the Vox/Sola Sound Tonebender, but with perhaps a bit more low end. So ... try the Fuzz face, and push the tone up? Anyway, depending on how things went, I'd swap out fuzz models and play with their settings before I changed the amp, but I might just try a few different Fender models, depending on how things went.