The lead vocal sounded nice and clear. It got a little abrasive on a note or two.
The cymbals I think got clobbered in the MP3 conversion. They get a little swishy here and there.
The clean guitar is a little abrasive. The attack is a little sharp.
Bass has a little cardboard-ish sound to it. Maybe a little cut around 600hz might help.
The background vox (doing the ah's) were kind of weird sounding, but I really liked them.
Good to see ya Trip.
I recorded the drums 8 bpm faster than the track with the intention of applying a vari-speed affect. But, my recording software only time stretched the track, it didn’t alter the frequency.
I tried using a sampler and with some help from Propellerhead I learned that the frequency differential is -1.372 semitones. But, pRecord uses a much higher degree of accuracy when calculating tempo and the sample would drift.
So I just lowered the tempo back to 97 bpm. This introduced some weird interaction with the cymbals and I like weird so I let it be. I think the phasing is a bit more pronounced.
There is a lot of compression on the guitar but I liked that ripping tone.
The bass is DI along with two mics and at different points the acoustic sound of the electric bass is more audible than the DI, plus I got some weird fret noise in there too.
I thinned out the BGV, three part harms double tracked with no eq was just too much gravy.
Last night I did a reset on the mixer with the intention of starting from zero, but the thing sounded so anemic I just said the hell with it. I’m indoctrinated to this one now.
Thanks for the spin Trip. When I saw you’d posted I expected a lot more white glove treatment. What’s up, you getting soft?
