N
Newbie-Doo
Member
My sons metal band wants me to record a few of their songs this weekend and I'd appreciate any tips you can give to help save me time and headache.
I went to one of their practice sessions and when they stated playing I couldn't hear anything but garbled noise. After 15-20 minutes of tweaking each amp and convincing the bass player to tune to "normal" pitch I was able to get this mass of distortion to actually sound like music.
The bass player was much happier and was grooving along, but the guitarists (especially the rythm guitarist) were not happy that they lost a lot of fat and harmonics off their sound. I told them we could record two tracks for each of them (one their way, one my way) and see which comes out best.
Will I be able to take the walls of mud and EQ them into something listenable, or should I push them to clear up their tone for recording? Mojo is important so I don't want to tweak their sound so much they end up playing unhappy.
HELP....
I went to one of their practice sessions and when they stated playing I couldn't hear anything but garbled noise. After 15-20 minutes of tweaking each amp and convincing the bass player to tune to "normal" pitch I was able to get this mass of distortion to actually sound like music.
The bass player was much happier and was grooving along, but the guitarists (especially the rythm guitarist) were not happy that they lost a lot of fat and harmonics off their sound. I told them we could record two tracks for each of them (one their way, one my way) and see which comes out best.
Will I be able to take the walls of mud and EQ them into something listenable, or should I push them to clear up their tone for recording? Mojo is important so I don't want to tweak their sound so much they end up playing unhappy.
HELP....