
circusfreak
New member
Hello all...
I have read numerous threads here about doubling a mono acoustic guitar track, then hard panning them. Then people have suggested shifting one track a few milliseconds, or compressing one really hard and leaving the other one alone... Or adding lots of reverb to one, etc...etc...etc...
Question -
I've got my doubled acoustic guitar tracks, and hard panned them. If I -
a) shift by milliseconds I get some pretty awful phasing. Is this correctable, or am I doing it incorrectly?
b) compress one hard and leave the other one alone it sounds really bad to me because my left ear sounds totally different than my right...
c) add tons of reverb to one - same problem as above.
I have read the acoustic guitar sticky many times over, and am just curious if anyone has anything to add to this discussion, or any tricks they generally go to when dealing with doubled tracks. Thanks so much for your insight and ideas.
PS - Double tracking the guitar is not really an option as I am a pretty aggressive, slappy guitar player and it NEVER comes out the same way twice so I just can't use that technique. I've tried....
peace-kev
I have read numerous threads here about doubling a mono acoustic guitar track, then hard panning them. Then people have suggested shifting one track a few milliseconds, or compressing one really hard and leaving the other one alone... Or adding lots of reverb to one, etc...etc...etc...
Question -
I've got my doubled acoustic guitar tracks, and hard panned them. If I -
a) shift by milliseconds I get some pretty awful phasing. Is this correctable, or am I doing it incorrectly?
b) compress one hard and leave the other one alone it sounds really bad to me because my left ear sounds totally different than my right...
c) add tons of reverb to one - same problem as above.
I have read the acoustic guitar sticky many times over, and am just curious if anyone has anything to add to this discussion, or any tricks they generally go to when dealing with doubled tracks. Thanks so much for your insight and ideas.
PS - Double tracking the guitar is not really an option as I am a pretty aggressive, slappy guitar player and it NEVER comes out the same way twice so I just can't use that technique. I've tried....

peace-kev