Thanks Emeric,
Yeah the hum is guitar generated. I was sitting right in front of a thirteen inch tv while trying to come up with the bass line.
I got a good take, and didn't want to let it go, so I kept it, hum and all. Damn you guys have good ears!! That's why this place is so important. From now on, no tv while recording. It's weird, you can use humbuckers next to a tv and have little or no hum, hence the name. Thanks I learned my lesson.
Big K,
I allmost don't want to tell you about my recording gear, but hear goes;
I recorded your drum part straight from the computer to a HiFi stereo vcr, in the living room.
Then took the tape into my studio and bounced from vcr to dcc (digital compact cassete), yes I still have one, and added the bass line. Then bounced back to vcr and added one guitar part. Then bounced back to dcc and added the second guitar part. I am very carefull about keeping out of the red, very important if you have to bounce tracks. I didn't use any processing, except on the guitar.
Some day I would love to have an eight track, but till then, I use what I've got. I think that's another thread.
This is a mix as you go thing, so when you are done it has to be right, because you can't change any levels. On the plus side, you're done!!
Then, I ran this mix throught a ten band EQ, hooked to my computer, and made a mp3.