W
Will Smythe
New member
Hey everyone,
Just fancy seeing if there's any ways i could improve the efficiency of my guitar recording.
Currently i record using a single capacitor mic to record it, positioned at around 45 degrees. Before i get stuck in i try to check using headphones and position it as correctly as possible.
in the mix i never pan fully to one side to help give a more surrounding perspective.
even with a controlled amount of compression, i lose a lot of my top end of the signal.
i just can't understand how groups like avenged sevenfold can capture the clarity so well.
Should i alter my amplification EQ so that it compensates for the resultant audio signal?
should i reconsider microphone gain levels when recording lead work?
should i purchase a dynamic microphone like a SM57?
maybe use two separate mics or will i start influencing the mix with phase differences altering the timbre of the sound?
Should i use crossing EQ so I'm boosting or cutting certain parts of the signal so they fit better together leaving more room for vocals?
Also, an effects pedal i use simulates amplification and microphones and it has a variety of different methods available to transfer the sound. a direct input can still sound quite realistic (line 6) although it still obtains its realism (as a pose to battery powered sound some pedals shell out) it still doesn't sound a scratch on the industry standard.
Any help would be muchly appreciated, thanks for your time,
Will
Just fancy seeing if there's any ways i could improve the efficiency of my guitar recording.
Currently i record using a single capacitor mic to record it, positioned at around 45 degrees. Before i get stuck in i try to check using headphones and position it as correctly as possible.
in the mix i never pan fully to one side to help give a more surrounding perspective.
even with a controlled amount of compression, i lose a lot of my top end of the signal.
i just can't understand how groups like avenged sevenfold can capture the clarity so well.
Should i alter my amplification EQ so that it compensates for the resultant audio signal?
should i reconsider microphone gain levels when recording lead work?
should i purchase a dynamic microphone like a SM57?
maybe use two separate mics or will i start influencing the mix with phase differences altering the timbre of the sound?
Should i use crossing EQ so I'm boosting or cutting certain parts of the signal so they fit better together leaving more room for vocals?
Also, an effects pedal i use simulates amplification and microphones and it has a variety of different methods available to transfer the sound. a direct input can still sound quite realistic (line 6) although it still obtains its realism (as a pose to battery powered sound some pedals shell out) it still doesn't sound a scratch on the industry standard.
Any help would be muchly appreciated, thanks for your time,
Will