
Slackmaster2K
Gone
So I finally got a bass to complete my "band" and have been playing around with recording in general.
I'm very amature at this, and really need some help. I have two big problems.
1) The guitar sounds too clean....or too 'smooth' if you know what I mean. Through the amp it sounds the way I want it which is "clean dirt". Oh man it's hard to describe this shit. Any tips on capturing a natural sound? (see more explanation below)
2) The overall mix. There's absolutely NO PUNCH. Everything's just kind of "there". While I have read a bunch on recording here and there, I have a terrible ear! I'm just getting a real yawner of a sound.
I'll post links to two small samples of what I'm talking about. Please don't feel 'obligated' or whatever to help if you have a slow internet connection. Both of these samples were mixed to mp3 at 256kbps and are 1.5 to 2.3MB...I wanted to capture what I'm hearing in .wav as well as possible in the mp3 format.
The following should be listened to with headphones as that's how they were mixed:
I'm not looking for anyone to comment on my playing on these samples as each instrument was done in a single take. I'm more concerned with the recording here than anything.
My setup for recording these samples:
The Bass (pawn shop Peavy) was recorded running through my guitar amp, close-miced with a Shure SM57. I recently purchased a SansAmp DI box for the bass and am hoping it will give me more punch.
The guitar (LP custom) was was miced in the same manner as the bass, but the volume was only at 3 or 4 (Peavy Studio Pro 60). Would cranking the volume help *that* much in overall sound quality? I will eventually do this when it's possible.
The drums were done using Drums! 2.0. On mixdown you're just hearing a short loop, but on trainmix2 they are done totally by hand to give a more realistic sound. (time consuming process...holy crap!)
I'm using my Fostex X28 4-track as a mixer running into an SB16 (ick) on my PC. I'm using n-Track Studio 2.0 for recording. I added some n-Track reverb as well as a bit of EQ (mostly low end) to the drums. There's nothing on the bass or guitar at all.
I'm mixing with headphones which is a big no-no...but that's my only "good" option right now. These mixes don't even sound good through headphones. If I could get just that far then 'yea is me!'
My main problem: just an overall "blah" sound. No punch where you'd expect punch. While I'm playing I "feel" and hear the punches....but when I playback...nothing!
Hints, suggestions, help! Go easy on me, I'm a knuckhead with a horrible ear.
Thanks,
Slackmaster 2000
I'm very amature at this, and really need some help. I have two big problems.
1) The guitar sounds too clean....or too 'smooth' if you know what I mean. Through the amp it sounds the way I want it which is "clean dirt". Oh man it's hard to describe this shit. Any tips on capturing a natural sound? (see more explanation below)
2) The overall mix. There's absolutely NO PUNCH. Everything's just kind of "there". While I have read a bunch on recording here and there, I have a terrible ear! I'm just getting a real yawner of a sound.

I'll post links to two small samples of what I'm talking about. Please don't feel 'obligated' or whatever to help if you have a slow internet connection. Both of these samples were mixed to mp3 at 256kbps and are 1.5 to 2.3MB...I wanted to capture what I'm hearing in .wav as well as possible in the mp3 format.
The following should be listened to with headphones as that's how they were mixed:
I'm not looking for anyone to comment on my playing on these samples as each instrument was done in a single take. I'm more concerned with the recording here than anything.
My setup for recording these samples:
The Bass (pawn shop Peavy) was recorded running through my guitar amp, close-miced with a Shure SM57. I recently purchased a SansAmp DI box for the bass and am hoping it will give me more punch.
The guitar (LP custom) was was miced in the same manner as the bass, but the volume was only at 3 or 4 (Peavy Studio Pro 60). Would cranking the volume help *that* much in overall sound quality? I will eventually do this when it's possible.
The drums were done using Drums! 2.0. On mixdown you're just hearing a short loop, but on trainmix2 they are done totally by hand to give a more realistic sound. (time consuming process...holy crap!)
I'm using my Fostex X28 4-track as a mixer running into an SB16 (ick) on my PC. I'm using n-Track Studio 2.0 for recording. I added some n-Track reverb as well as a bit of EQ (mostly low end) to the drums. There's nothing on the bass or guitar at all.
I'm mixing with headphones which is a big no-no...but that's my only "good" option right now. These mixes don't even sound good through headphones. If I could get just that far then 'yea is me!'
My main problem: just an overall "blah" sound. No punch where you'd expect punch. While I'm playing I "feel" and hear the punches....but when I playback...nothing!
Hints, suggestions, help! Go easy on me, I'm a knuckhead with a horrible ear.
Thanks,
Slackmaster 2000