G
GoK
New member
Hi everyone. I have a feeling there's going to be some cringing when I explain my situation. It's a sound engineer's nightmare.
I bought a microphone a few months ago and have been messing around with audacity to record some of my songs. I've gotten the drums down to a tolerable quality, but I've been stuck on how to record distorted guitar. When I say "distorted", I mean metal distortion. Heavy. So far, the fruits of my labor regarding both mic placement and post-processing have been a muddy sound.
My amp is a "Transchorus 210". Don't know what the guitar is called but it sounds decent. Not high-end quality, but not a crappy guitar. The mic I use is the "Snowball", made by Blue. It's a odd looking USB mic with 3 different settings - a cardioid capsule, a cardioid capsule with a -10db pad, and an omni capsule. My recording space is my large, open, unfinished basement: cement floors and walls. There really isn't much of an echo though.
Does anybody have any tips on mic placement or post-processing?
I bought a microphone a few months ago and have been messing around with audacity to record some of my songs. I've gotten the drums down to a tolerable quality, but I've been stuck on how to record distorted guitar. When I say "distorted", I mean metal distortion. Heavy. So far, the fruits of my labor regarding both mic placement and post-processing have been a muddy sound.
My amp is a "Transchorus 210". Don't know what the guitar is called but it sounds decent. Not high-end quality, but not a crappy guitar. The mic I use is the "Snowball", made by Blue. It's a odd looking USB mic with 3 different settings - a cardioid capsule, a cardioid capsule with a -10db pad, and an omni capsule. My recording space is my large, open, unfinished basement: cement floors and walls. There really isn't much of an echo though.
Does anybody have any tips on mic placement or post-processing?