Yes, you can. At least in Sibelius 5 and 6.
Sibelius 5 has the functionality to create a servicable "distorted guitar" by combining instruments and filters. A better one is available if you buy the "Rock and Pop" soundbanks. Not as sure about Sibelius 6, but it DOES have a guitar.
the easiest way is with a product called stealthplug , you plug your guitar into a special adaptor and the adaptor into your computers usb and a software will give you the exact distortion you want. pro tip use gain and noise gate to make the ultimate distortion
Sure you can but, it will not sound near as good as if you use an amp made just for acoustic guitars. Electric guitar amps all have distortion even if it is set and sounds perfectly clean to your ears....distortion is not an acoustic guitars friend. If you dont believe me go to a guitar store and plug in an electric acoustic into each amp...you will see what I mean.
export to midi first
Electric Guitars with alot of distortion, a fast drummer with double bass drums and a bass guitar. Along with a powerfull lead singer
If you mean YOUR guitar, then I have no clue. But all guitars are different and you will just need to chop and change until you find the right one with the right sound
its just hardcore you can use distortion through a amp and just rock out loud
most amps have a built in distortion setting , you can get a clean sound which is without effects no problem if that's what you mean.
There is usually a button or switch on the amp which turns distortion on and off.
the easiest way is with a product called stealthplug , you plug your guitar into a special adaptor and the adaptor into your computers usb and a software will give you the exact distortion you want. pro tip use gain and noise gate to make the ultimate distortion
Sure you can but, it will not sound near as good as if you use an amp made just for acoustic guitars. Electric guitar amps all have distortion even if it is set and sounds perfectly clean to your ears....distortion is not an acoustic guitars friend. If you dont believe me go to a guitar store and plug in an electric acoustic into each amp...you will see what I mean.
depends on the amplifier settings for electric vs acoustic. if neither guitar has any electricity going through it to the untrained ear all you will hear is a subtle difference in volume with an electric guitar plugged in and distortion more aggressive and fuzzy I guess would be a good way to put it.
Use a Korg, Ibanez distortion pedal, or use a processor.
export to midi first
Electric Guitars with alot of distortion, a fast drummer with double bass drums and a bass guitar. Along with a powerfull lead singer
If you mean YOUR guitar, then I have no clue. But all guitars are different and you will just need to chop and change until you find the right one with the right sound
Just the distortion from a Marshall JCM 900 amp (they don't use distortion pedals).
distortion (added) Feedback (helps with distortion) and "The Power Chord"