
mikemorgan
panned out
A crucial part of my guitar sound and playing style involves using heavy compression. When recorded direct, the wavelength starts with a tremendous spike, followed by a smooth flow which rises, and then eventually trails off. I am able to adjust the compressor attack enough to compensate for most of this, but of course those pesky peaks are keeping me from getting all the bits I deserve.
I'll be working with a new engineer next week who I suspect will ask me to track as dry as possible, but I am worried about losing the feel, sustain and sense of power that a healthy squish gives me. I like the slow release and swell which pushes my amp into saturation in a more controllable way.
How do I kill the peaks? Will a limiter accomplish this without cutting off the attack? Is there a guitar pedal oriented limiter I can add to my rig for future sessions? This is pretty much a deal-breaker for me, I've tracked dry before and have never been happy with the results.
Thanks for your replies, we're going into sessions in two weeks.
I'll be working with a new engineer next week who I suspect will ask me to track as dry as possible, but I am worried about losing the feel, sustain and sense of power that a healthy squish gives me. I like the slow release and swell which pushes my amp into saturation in a more controllable way.
How do I kill the peaks? Will a limiter accomplish this without cutting off the attack? Is there a guitar pedal oriented limiter I can add to my rig for future sessions? This is pretty much a deal-breaker for me, I've tracked dry before and have never been happy with the results.
Thanks for your replies, we're going into sessions in two weeks.