Are you looking for a flexible amp modeler for the stage, studio, or home? In this in-depth demo, PG contributor Tom Butwin takes you through gigging, practicing, and recording with two compelling options: the touchscreen-powered Hotone Ampero II and the tactile, amp-style Blackstar AMPED 3.
Following his historic three-night stand at New York City’s Bowery Ballroom earlier this year — hailed by BILLBOARD as “a religious experience” and moving NPR to rave “Paul McCartney has so much swag it’s ridiculous” — Paul McCartney and his acclaimed Got Back Tour will make their wildly anticipated return to North America this fall.
Got Back’s 2025 run of 19 newly announced dates marks Paul’s first extensive series of shows across the US and Canada since 2022. The tour kicks off September 29th with Paul’s Greater Palm Springs area live debut at Acrisure Arena and runs through to a November 24-25th finale at the United Center in Chicago. Got Back 2025 will feature Paul’s long-awaited return to Las Vegas, Denver, Des Moines, Minneapolis, Tulsa, New Orleans, Atlanta, Nashville, Columbus, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Montreal, and Hamilton – plus a few cities that will be hosting their first-ever Paul McCartney concerts, Albuquerque and the aforementioned Greater Palm Springs area.
General on sale for these Got Back tour dates will begin July 18th at 10am local time. For further information, pre-sales etc., check paulmccartneygotback.com.
Irrefutably one of the most successful and influential singer-songwriters and performers of all time, McCartney’s concerts bring to life the most beloved catalogue in music. With songs like “Hey Jude,” “Live and Let Die,” “Band on the Run,” “Let It Be” and so many more, the Paul McCartney live experience is everything any music lover could ever want from a rock show and more: hours of the greatest moments from the last 60 years of music – dozens of songs from Paul’s solo, Wings and of course Beatles songbooks that have formed the soundtracks of our lives.
Paul McCartney launched his Got Back tour in 2022 with16 sold out shows across the US that led up to his history-making set at Glastonbury in June 2022. In 2023 Paul performed 18 shows as Got Back rocked through Australia, Mexico and Brazil. In 2024, Paul amazed capacity crowds at more than 20 dates spanning from South America and Mexico to the UK and Europe.
Paul and his band have performed in an unparalleled range of venues and locations worldwide: From outside the Colosseum in Rome, Moscow’s Red Square, Buckingham Palace, The White House and a free show in Mexico for over 400,000 people to the last ever show at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park where The Beatles played their final concert in 1966, a 2016 week in the California desert that included two headline sets at the historic Desert Trip festival and a jam-packed club gig for a few hundred lucky fans at Pappy & Harriet’s Pioneertown Palace, two Glastonbury Festival headline slots, rocking the Bowery in New York City for a week of spontaneous club shows, and even one performance broadcast live into Space!
Featuring Paul’s longtime band – Paul “Wix” Wickens (keyboards), Brian Ray (bass/guitar), Rusty Anderson (guitar) and Abe Laboriel Jr (drums) – and constantly upgraded state of the art audio and video technology that ensures an unforgettable experience from every seat in the house, a Paul McCartney concert is never anything short of life-changing. The Got Back Tour also features the Hot City Horns — Mike Davis (trumpet), Kenji Fenton (saxes) and Paul Burton (trombone) — who first joined Paul in 2018 to perform at Grand Central Station ahead of embarking on the Freshen Up World Tour in the same year.
PAUL McCARTNEY – GOT BACK 2025
September 29 — Palm Desert, CA — Acrisure Arena October 4 – Las Vegas, NV — Allegiant Stadium October 7 – Albuquerque, NM — Isleta Amphitheater October 11 – Denver, CO — Coors Field October 14 – Des Moines, IA — Casey’s Center October 17 – Minneapolis, MN — U.S. Bank Stadium October 22 – Tulsa, OK – BOK Center October 29 – New Orleans, LA — Smoothie King Center November 2 – Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena November 3 – Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena November 6 – Nashville, TN – The Pinnacle November 8 – Columbus, OH — Nationwide Arena November 11 – Pittsburgh, PA — PPG Paints Arena November 14 – Buffalo, NY — KeyBank Center November 17 – Montreal, QC — Bell Centre November 18 – Montreal, QC — Bell Centre November 21 – Hamilton, ON – TD Coliseum November 24 – Chicago, IL — United Center November 25 – Chicago, IL — United Center
Proper bus routing and submixing techniques will increase your efficiency in the studio and raise your DAW’s tracking power.
Nothing can make you sweat quicker than having computer-related issues when tracking an artist or a band: millisecond delays in headphone mixes, plugins lagging, glitchy performance from your DAW. Even if you’re tracking only yourself, it is frustrating and breaks your creative flow. For this Dojo, I want to give you some tips for staying in the flow and keeping your cool.
Harnessing the Power of Buses and Submixes.
For the modern guitarist venturing into home recording, your computer’s power and your DAW can be both a blessing or a bottleneck. As creative possibilities expand, so does the strain on your computer’s CPU. Fortunately, one of the most powerful tools for optimizing your recording workflow and CPU usage comes from the tried-and-true, old-school, analog domain: proper bus routing and submixing techniques.
Efficient Signal Flow In the world of digital recording, a bus is essentially a virtual pathway that allows multiple audio tracks to be routed to a single auxiliary (aux) track. This aux track can then be processed with effects like reverb, delay, EQ, or compression, applying the same settings to all routed tracks simultaneously. For guitarists, this is particularly useful when layering rhythm tracks, harmonies, or ambient textures that all benefit from similar effects.
Why Use Buses?
CPU Efficiency: Instead of inserting the same reverb plugin on five different guitar tracks, route all of them to a bus with a single reverb instance.
Consistent Sound: Buses help glue multiple guitar tracks together, ensuring a cohesive tone.
Simplified Mixing: Adjusting levels or automation on a single bus affects all associated tracks, saving time and effort.
Submixes: Organizing Your Sonic Palette Submixes are essentially buses with a specific organizational role. In larger sessions, creating submixes for instrument families (e.g., drums, guitars, vocals) helps maintain clarity and control. For home-recording guitarists, a common approach is to create submixes for:
Clean guitars
Overdriven/distorted guitars
Ambient or effects-heavy guitars
Each submix can have tailored processing chains appropriate to the tone and role of those particular guitar parts. For instance, you might apply light compression and stereo widening on clean guitars, while distorted parts could benefit from dynamic EQ and multiband compression.
“Another great trick if you’re running low on CPU power with a large track count is to bounce or ‘render in place’ any finalized parts.”
Practical Setup Example
Let’s say you’ve recorded:
three rhythm guitar tracks (L, R, center)
two lead parts with delay
one ambient swell track
Then set up three stereo buses and route rhythm guitars (three tracks) into stereo bus one, leads (two tracks) into stereo bus two, and finally the ambient guitar to a more generic stereo bus that will be used by other tracks in your mix and to bring some cohesion.
Lightening the CPU Load Modern plugins can be CPU-intensive, especially convolution reverbs, amp simulators, or complex modulation effects. Routing similar instruments through buses allows you to:
Use one amp sim plugin on a bus during the writing/mixing phase
Print or freeze tracks with final effects before the mastering stage
Automate bus bypassing when a group isn’t active in a section to reduce processing
Another great trick if you’re running low on CPU power with a large track count is to bounce or “render in place” any finalized parts. Once you’re happy with a guitar tone, turn it into a static audio file, removing the need for real-time plugin processing.
Classic Techniques Finally, in classic pop production—think the Beatles, Fleetwood Mac, or Michael Jackson—engineers relied on submixes even in the analog domain. Drums, guitars, vocals, and backing vocals were often premixed to stereo stems to facilitate real-time mixing without modern automation.
Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound famously involved routing dozens of instrumental layers into a single bus and feeding that into a reverb chamber. The result was a lush, unified soundscape. This same idea applies today: Guitar tracks layered for harmonic richness can be routed into a reverb bus to achieve that enveloping texture.
Smart Routing, Better Results Creating buses and submixes may seem like advanced engineering, but it’s simply smart organization. For the home-recording guitarist, this practice not only streamlines workflow but also ensures a more professional-sounding mix. By mimicking tried-and-true studio practices as well as optimizing for CPU load, you can focus less on troubleshooting and more on making music.
So, whether you're recording your next EP or collaborating online, harness the power of bus routing to bring clarity, control, and character to your guitar tracks. Until next month, namaste.
GRAMMY® Award-nominated songwriter, vocalist, multi-instrumentalist, and producer Wolfgang Van Halen has unveiled all the information for his upcoming third album, The End. The album – released by BMG – is slated for release on October 24. The 10-track album clocks in at 39-minuttes and showcases the evolution of Wolf and his songwriting since he launched his solo career in 2020. Recorded at the legendary 5150 studio, the album was produced by friend and collaborator Michael “Elvis” Baskette.
The End is available for pre-order in multiple configurations including limited edition vinyl colors, signed insert version and retailer exclusives here: https://Mammoth.lnk.to/TheEndAlbum.
Continuing the tradition of writing all the songs and performing all the instrumentation and vocals himself, Wolfgang Van Halen set out to challenge himself beyond what he did on his debut and sophomore release, Mammoth II. From the hypnotic opening of “One Of A Kind” to infectious closer “All In Good Time,” Wolfgang demonstrates his proficiency as a musician and songwriter. Songs like “Same Old Song,” “Happy,” and “Selfish” will fit perfectly alongside older songs that fans have already come to love from Mammoth. Mammoth released their first single in May, and it has shot up the charts currently in the Top 5 at Active Rock radio. The success of the single was propelled by the landmark music video – a remake of the classic film From Dusk ‘Til Dawn – directed by Robert Rodriguez and Greg Nicotero. The video is approaching 4-million views and contains cameos from Danny Trejo, Slash, Myles Kennedy, and of course his mother Valerie Bertinelli. To coincide with the album announcement, Mammoth is releasing the track “The Spell” for fans to check out.
The tracklisting for The End is:
One Of A Kind
The End
Same Old Song
The Spell
I Really Wanna
Happy
Better Off
Something New
Selfish
All In Good Time
Mammoth has become known for being road warriors, constantly taking to the road to play their music for the masses whenever they can. 2025 will continues that trend as the band will be heading out with longtime friends in CREED on the Return of the Summer of ’99 Tour this summer. Backed by his live band featuring Jon Jourdan, Frank Sidoris, Ronnie Ficarro, and Garrett Whitlock, Wolfgang and Mammoth hit the road July 9in Lexington, KY through August 30 where the tour wraps in Halifax, NS. To celebrate the album being in stores this October, Mammoth will be heading out on a Fall headline run. The End Tour kicks off on October 31 and runs for 5 weeks before it wraps up on December 7. The tour will make stops in Las Vegas, NV (November 1), Atlanta, GA (November 8), Montclair, NJ (November 14), Chicago, IL (November 26) and Tempe, AZ (December 6) to name a few. Longtime friend Myles Kennedy will be the special guest on the run. More information on all tickets and VIP passes can be found at www.mammoth.band.
Blackstar Amplification is proud to announce the release of ID:X, a new generation of advanced DSP modellingamplifiers created for guitarists who demand intuitive control, powerful tone, and flexible connectivity. Available inboth 50 Watt and 100 Watt models, ID:X goes head-to-head with the current market leader delivering a streamlineduser experience with unmatched sound quality and versatility.
Built on the foundation of Blackstar’s acclaimed and award-winning ID:Series, Silverline and AMPED, ID:X introduces a discreet user-friendly OLED display, providing instant visual feedback and deep access for editing settings and effects without the need for menu-diving or external devices. The amps feature six carefully designed voices that cover everything from pristine cleans to our signature Blackstar high-gain tones, all shaped by a powerful four-band EQ section including our patented ISF, allowing players to craft their sound with precision.
Over 35 effects are included, spanning overdrives, distortions, modulation, delays and reverbs. Each effect is fully editable directly from the amp using simple, real-time encoders, making it effortless to dial in tones and jump between different effect types and parameters on the fly.
ID:X also includes Blackstar’s latest IR-based CabRig™ technology, offering powerful speaker and mic simulation and featuring new In The Room™ technology which creates the experience of standing next to an amp while you play, rather than the more studio focussed tones of traditionally captured IRs – all with a choice of EL84, EL34 and 6L6 valve responses to shape the amp’s dynamic feel. Players can create and store up to 99 patches, with easy recall via the front panel or using the compatible FS-12 or FS-18 footswitches. The amps are fully integrated with Blackstar’s Architect software, providing deep editing, patch management and access to a growing online community where you can create, share and download patches with other users and artists.
With a full suite of modern connections, including balanced XLR out*, USB-C for recording, a ¼-inch line out, headphone output, MIDI in and thru* and an aux input, ID:X is ready for everything from silent practice and studio sessions to full live performance. Selectable power modes (including 1W for quiet playing) make it just as suitable for late-night inspiration as it is for the stage.
Designed for players who want the sound and response of a pro rig without the weight or complexity, ID:X represents a bold step forward in modern amp design. Combining hands-on control with studio-quality tone and next-level flexibility, it’s the all-in-one solution today’s guitarists have been waiting for.
The Blackstar ID:X Series is available now at authorised dealers worldwide.