C
chiefnoshow
New member
you want it to sound like that get a nice rig and go into a pro studio. that band's sound is the product of countless hours of post-production, mixing, and editing.
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you want it to sound like that get a nice rig and go into a pro studio. that band's sound is the product of countless hours of post-production, mixing, and editing.
there are alot of great guys on HR who do metal really well, check them out. I believe LegionSerial is one
To the OP. I know you had mentioned that you double track the guitars left and right, but it's worth doing 2 left, 2 right, like an extra layer to thicken up the sound. If you can do the extra layer with a different amp to the first layer aswell you might have even better results.
the reason I am and wanting to get a sound like that is because alot of bands in my area play music close to that so I am trying to get the sound that the people are wanting/QUOTE]
all business. i think you should start a 60's soul cover band. everyone who wants to avoid the bands in your area "that play close to that" will come.
but whatever. get some tattoos on your neck and play what the meatheads want to hear.
FWIW. IMHO. YMMV.
What! no-one knows Ivor Biggun?
I can only assume that the joke was so lame it was ignored.
the reason I am and wanting to get a sound like that is because alot of bands in my area play music close to that so I am trying to get the sound that the people are wanting/QUOTE]
all business. i think you should start a 60's soul cover band. everyone who wants to avoid the bands in your area "that play close to that" will come.
but whatever. get some tattoos on your neck and play what the meatheads want to hear.
FWIW. IMHO. YMMV.
Ha! My thoughts exactly. Find your own sound, or you can be a pseudo coverband the rest of your career.
Guitars on these recordings sound like they're not mic'd amps. They're so fuzzy, it sounds like they were done line-in with some type of pod type thing.They don't seem to have that ambience to them that a mic seems to produce. I could be wrong.
is there some special way to go about getting a big sounding guitar
Wow...thanks...
You know I'm just a hack...certainly not an expert. I really don't expect to get props like this. I'd love to part with some of my 'expertise' but I really don't have any. I just know what I like.
To the OP. I know you had mentioned that you double track the guitars left and right, but it's worth doing 2 left, 2 right, like an extra layer to thicken up the sound. If you can do the extra layer with a different amp to the first layer aswell you might have even better results.
Oh and crank the mids. Don't scoop them under any circumstances. You need those mids to cut through the mix.
About all else I could say is to experiment. Record a little with different mic placements, take notes, and see what you like best. How it goes in is the most important thing. I personally don't do a damn thing to the guitars once they're recorded barring rolling off the lows from 100hz occasionally. For high gain guitars you shouldn't need to use compression at all.
Can you clarify fuzzy?
They've been compressed and equed and highly "produced" but from what I understand as a general rule "line-in" should be avoided. I heard once that smart people+ good equipment+ good players= quality sounding recordings.
Amen.
I will typically do a LITTLE more post-production work than you, for two reasons. One, I play a seven string, and while a low E will have a fundamental down in the 80hz range, a low B will typically be a bit lower, around 60hz. So, I've got a bit more low end to work with than you, and it gets that much closer to the bass. I'll almost always do some sort of a low-pass, typically 60-80 hz, maybe 80-160 for leads.
Also, occasionally I'll run a low-pass or a low-shelf down -3 or so on the guitars in the 8-10k range just to clear up a little bit of high end fizz. It's the kind of think where, set right, you can't really hear the change in the mix, but if you solo the tracks it's clearer. I play a Recto, it's got a lot of presence, but ultimately I suspect what this means is that my mic placement just isn't perfect in the first place, and not that this is necessarily great advice.
Aside from that though, spot on.