Can anyone give me tips on EQing guitar tracks. Right now their kind of thin and I want to give them a little more fullness and beef to them. I messed with EQ, Normalizing and Compressing and all I seem to get is a louder verision of the tone that I have
I’ve been working with a PODxt and Digitech. I get the tones set the way I want them in my headphones, but when I record (on Adobe Audition) the tones come out thinner and higher. I’m recording through the USB 2 port.
Anyone know how I can get the full sound in my headphones to translate. Is...
I'm still having problems with my audition starting and stopping during recording. I've done everything I'm supposed to. I'm not using an effects, I'm adjusted my buffers, I even went out and got an external hard drive.
Funny thing is I've recorder 20 tracks and nothing went wrong. But on this...
I'm getting a lot of clicks and pops recording line in (with a PodXT) and the click / pop elimiator isn't getting rid of them. Can anyone help me with this problem?
I have a Digitech RPx400 and I’ve been trying for a month to get a decent distorted tone. (too much Fuzz, not enough warmth) I’ve about given up and am ready to invest in some new equipment. I was wondering if any of you pros can give a newbie some equipment advice.
I’ve heard some demos with...
I’ve written with a few people and varying styles of writing. I was just curious for most songwriters what comes first: the music or the lyrics? Do most great songwriters perfer one before the other?
I’ve been using my Digitech RPx400 to record onto Pro Tracks with. I tweeked the sound just as I liked it, but after I record and play back the tone is lower and sounds a bit muddy. Anyone know what could be causing this?
Sorry for such a simple question, thanks in advance
I was recording some basic acoustic guitar parts today (Ovation through a digitech RPx400 recording onto Pro Tracks) and I started getting a split sec delay on my monitor. I switched guitars & made sure that none of the delays or reverb settings were on the processor but it was still coming...
I read somewhere that you can get a good guitar sound for recording by putting a Marshall or Fender mini amp in a shoe box, covering the box with just a little hole for the mic. Anyone else try this? If so how did the sound turn out? How about mic placement?
I recently bought a Digitech RPx400 with the USB hook up and pro tools. I figured it would be a good way to send ideas to my former songwriting partners and get my feet wet in basic digital recording.
The sound is decent, and even though I’m a novice I know nothing beats a mic and an amp...