色色啦

News

Deep learning can fool listeners by imitating any guitar amplifier

A study from the Aalto Acoustics Lab demonstrates that digital simulations of guitar amplifiers can sound just like the real thing. The implications are that as the software models continue to improve, they can replace traditional analogue guitar amplifiers, which are bulky, fragile and expensive.
Testing guitar signals at the Aalto Acoustics Lab
Testing guitar signals at the Acoustics Lab

Many popular guitar amplifiers and distortion effects are based on analogue circuitry. To achieve the desired distortion of the guitar signal, these circuits use nonlinear components, such as vacuum tubes, diodes, or transistors. As music production becomes increasingly digitised, the demand for faithful digital emulations of analogue audio effects is increasing.  

Professor Vesa V盲lim盲ki explains that this is an exciting development in deep learning, 鈥楧eep neural networks for guitar distortion modelling has been tested before, but this is the first time, where blind-test listeners couldn鈥檛 tell the difference between a recording and a fake distorted guitar sound! This is akin to when the computer first learned to play chess鈥. 

The main objective of the field of Virtual Analog (VA) modelling is to create digital emulations of these analogue systems which will allow bulky, expensive and fragile analogue equipment to be replaced by software plugins that can be used on a modern desktop or laptop computer.  

A specific amplifier鈥檚 circuitry can be accurately simulated using circuit modelling techniques, but the result is often a model that is too computationally demanding for real-time processing. Additionally, a new model has to be created for each amplifier being modelled, and the process is labour intensive.

A basic schematic of the guitar signal between the neural net and amplifier

An alternative approach for VA modelling is 鈥渂lack-box鈥 modelling. Black-box modelling is based on measuring the circuit鈥檚 response to some input signals and creating a model which replicates the observed input-output mapping. The study from which these results came, was based on the WaveNet convolutional neural network. 

The digital amplifier model is created using a deep neural network. Audio is recorded from a 鈥檛arget 鈥檊uitar amplifier, and this audio is used to train the deep neural network to simulate that guitar amplifier. 

Alec Wright, a doctoral student, focusing on audio processing using deep learning says,鈥 The tests were conducted to validate the performance of models emulating either the Blackstar HT5 Metal or Mesa Boogie Express 5:50+ tube amplifiers. The models were created with a focus on real-time performance, and all of them can be run in real-time on a desktop computer鈥. 

All of this means that in the near future, all a guitarist will need to do is plug into their laptop that is running the deep neural plugin, and a thoroughly convincing vintage guitar amp sound will come from the speakers.鈥 

It remains to be seen if guitar amplifier purists will be willing to part with their beloved rigs, but this innovation paves the way for any audio enthusiast to digitally get the desired guitar sound, whether it be a Marshall, Orange, Fender, or anything else, on the road or in the studio.  

Read the paper here: 

More information

Study Acoustics and Audio Technology at Aalto University

Three Aalto University students working in a acoustics laboratory

Acoustics and Audio Technology - Computer, Communication and Information Sciences, Master of Science (Technology)

The major in Acoustics and Audio Technology equips students with a fundamental understanding of human hearing, audio perception, and physics of sound. The skills they acquire enable, for example, reducing noise pollution, planning harmonic environments and designing coherent sound experiences.

Study options
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Two students and a professor sitting around a table, talking and looking at laptop screen.
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Call for doctoral student tutors, September 2025

Sign-up to be a tutor for new doctoral students as part of the Aalto Doctoral Orientation Days!
A group sitting around tables in a modern room; some are holding papers and discussing. Photo from the EDI workshop in June 2025.
University Published:

Creating room for connection, dialogue, and collective planning is more important than ever

Two workshops were organised to build bridges and foster meaningful action on EDI at the Aalto School of Business.
Person adjusting equipment in an anechoic chamber with soundproof wedges on walls.
Studies Published:

Keys to growth: Launching new enterprises to lift all of Finland

This article series tells the story of Aalto鈥檚 work as a builder of a better society. Aalto Founder School equips students with the skills needed to set up and lead a successful growth companies
Abstract image of glowing teal shapes and pink blocks on a striped yellow and green surface, with a dark background.
Research & Art Published:

Researchers turn energy loss into a way of creating lossless photonics-based devices

Turning energy loss from a fatal flaw into a dial for fine-tuning new states of matter into existence could yield better laser, quantum and optical technology.