Introduction
Bass Amp Room was designed to handle all your bass amp needs,
from dirty rock to modern clean, keeping two equally important goals
in mind. The first was to give the user the best possible sound
quality. The latter was to create an intuitive plug-in which allows for a
really fast work flow. Time is money, but cutting down on time
shouldn't mean you have to accept poor results.
Bass Amp Room consists of a model of a classic bass amplifier, three
distinctive speaker cabinets with click-and-drag mics, and a blendable
DI section with tone controls and a limiter. That's it. And it's all you
need to create a unique signature sound - the strength lies in the
ease of use of the individual blocks and the huge range of sounds
these can produce when combined.
In short, Bass Amp Room is all about getting a sound you know you
can trust, and getting it quickly, from a plug-in you don't need a
degree in computer science to handle.
Features
- Authentic amp and cabinet modeling
- Three versatile and good-sounding cabinets
- Designed for excellent results and fast work flow
- Built-in one-knob limiter in D.I. panel
- Easy to use mix and D.I. panel
- Flexible & continuous click-and-drag mic positioning
- Fully automatable parameters
- 3-D rendered photo-realistic user interface
- Compatible with all effects that work with real amps
- Amp/Cab Bypass possiblities let you use cabinets from other Amp
Room products
Amplifier |
Authenic Amp Modeling
Although being designed as a guitar amp, this 70s amp has proven to be
an excellent choice for bass players. A thick and solid preamp
distortion without any fizz lets you crank it up without losing the low end.

The power amp has a more traditional power amp distortion (controlled
by the Master Volume knob), but at extreme settings it will
start to sound more ... erhm... broken.
The High/Low switch wasn't a part of the original amp, but was
added to give you a cleaner and fatter sound when necessary.
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Cabinets |

The Classic
Industry standard 8x10" for fat rock solid bass tones with lots of low
end and lots of definition.
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The Rocker
For rock sounds, a 4x12" is the given choice. Focused, hard and sounds
just as it should.
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The Odd Bird
An open back 1x12" isn't exactly the most usual choice for a bass player, but in
a studio it works just excellent!
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D.I. and Mix Panel |
Separate D.I. Controls
The D.I. is separate from the amp and cabs, and allows you to tailor
the direct signal separately from the amped signal, just like in real
life. The tone controls are specially designed for bass and are
extremely fast to work with.
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D.I. Limiter
The one knob limiter tames the transients in the direct bass signal.
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Blend Amp and D.I.
The possibility to blend the D.I. signal with the amp signal allows you
to get a huge range of sounds. For instance, set the amp on a really
distorted signal, and blend in some low end from the D.I.
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