N
noground
New member
I am really confused here.
I can track bright sounding electric guitars with mics that have peaks in the upper frequencies (also using the bass cutoff switch). I can turn up the treble knob on my bright sounding guitar pedal and amp... maybe even the bright switch on my amp. Then when I mix it in I can just arbitrarily shelf everything above 4k up 6 dB and then it starts to sounds like commercial recordings. I have a pretty hifi signal chain too.
Is this all accomplished in mastering or something? This seems to be the case with all the instruments I've dealt with... vocals, bass, drums...
If all instruments were recorded flat, with flat mics, unequalized... mud is all we would get. not a little bit off but totally unacceptable. What should I do? Track absolutely everything through one of those exciter boxes or something?
Any thoughts?
I can track bright sounding electric guitars with mics that have peaks in the upper frequencies (also using the bass cutoff switch). I can turn up the treble knob on my bright sounding guitar pedal and amp... maybe even the bright switch on my amp. Then when I mix it in I can just arbitrarily shelf everything above 4k up 6 dB and then it starts to sounds like commercial recordings. I have a pretty hifi signal chain too.
Is this all accomplished in mastering or something? This seems to be the case with all the instruments I've dealt with... vocals, bass, drums...
If all instruments were recorded flat, with flat mics, unequalized... mud is all we would get. not a little bit off but totally unacceptable. What should I do? Track absolutely everything through one of those exciter boxes or something?
Any thoughts?