The bass amp is to simulate a more acoustic sound I guess, it's a 12 string guitar sim preset and I'm playing an electric guitar.
It's a MIDI VST sound
OK, turn that off and just listen to the wave, do you get the Shh sound? If you do, then there is a source problem. If you don't then the Amp sim is making the sound. You can correct that several different ways, but the easiest it to put a noise gate at the end of the amp and set the threshold just above the shh sound. You should be able to turn on record and monitor live and hear the shh sound without any wave playing.
Either way, if you don't hear it with the wave file playing and no effect turned on, then your sim is "simulating" that amps output. Noise gate it at the threshold level that removes the shh noise (just above the sound should work), but not the guitar sound.
Try it see how it works.
Turning it off didn't help. I think the noise appears because the volume of the preset is too loud, the problem is that when I turn it down I can't hear much. How do you turn it up without the noise?
I checked again and it was the amp like you said. But when I turn it off it doesn't sound good. There's no more noise but the sound isn't right for the song
SR7 the link to your clean file is the same as the hissy one..... sorry to be a pain, I thought I was going crazy but they are the same file....
Right, we are just troubleshooting the issue. So we now know or at least you have confirmed, the signal coming in doesn't have an issue. Now you can turn on your amp and start playing with ways to remove the shh sound. Get the sound you want by playing with the settings, once you get them, use a noise gate filter, as stated before to see if you can remove the low end noise but maintain the guitar level.
I'm sorry but that's the same link. I put it in my signature because I couldn't put links until I posted 10 times and I forgot to turn the signature off when I posted that
I tried Z-Noise and it does do the job but it sounds way less bright
OK, now what you need to do is get close to the sound you want, but don't worry so much about the final sound until you are in the total mix (guitars, drums, synthesizers) as it may not matter in the "total mix". You could possibly improve that by using some EQ. But wait until you have more of the total mix recorded and defined. That is why as a general rule you don't EQ to a solo/single sound as it is more important how it fits the mix verses just how it sounds.
Go ahead, do some recording, get a mix, then put it up in the MP3 clinic and work from there. Main point is, you have removed a negative sound from the source verse trying to remove it afterwards. It is easier to EQ than to remove noises.
Sucks that it's a cover of a instrumental acoustic song. This is the original:
I'm planning on buying an electro-acoustic guitar, I guess I will re-record it when I get it. Thanks for all the help
Don't let the video fool you. I bet there is more going on there than a dude playing with two mics. Not sure about the electric acoustic, but mic it, play it, let's go from there.
I do agree with the mic placement.
Do I need to buy a mic? I was thinking on just plugging it directly to Cubase and recording, wouldn't that kinda give me the same sound it has unplugged?
SR7 I have Cubase 7.5. If you upload the cpr file I can take a look at the problem for you....