7 Pro Tips for Getting the Best Tone from Voxengo Boogex
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Start with clean DI
Record a high-quality direct input (DI) guitar signal with proper gain staging. Boogex reacts best to a clear, well-recorded source. -
Choose the right cabinet model
Try different cabinet impulse responses or built-in cabinet types first. Pick one that matches the style (e.g., closed-back 4×12 for rock, single 12” for blues). -
Use input drive sparingly
Increase the input drive to add harmonic saturation, but avoid clipping the plugin’s input. Small increments often yield more natural tone than large boosts. -
Blend dry/wet for clarity
Use the dry/wet mix to keep definition. For rhythm parts, a higher wet mix is fine; for lead or doubled parts, keep some dry signal for attack and presence. -
Shape tone with the EQ and presence controls
Cut muddy low-mid frequencies (around 200–500 Hz) and add presence around 2–5 kHz. Use Boogex’s built-in EQ/presence to dial attack and air without overloading the cabinet simulation. -
Tame harshness with post-cab EQ or smoothing
If the high end is brittle, insert a gentle low-pass or shelf cut after Boogex, or use a de-esser-style plugin on the 3–7 kHz range to smooth harsh pick noise. -
Use impulse-response (IR) placement and mic blending
If using IRs that simulate mic positions, experiment with on-axis vs. off-axis and blend multiple IRs for a fuller, more realistic sound. For stereo width, slightly offset or use different IRs on left and right.
Date: March 5, 2026
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