must be a wavelength thing...
Dot, this is awesome...
I swear... I'm on the same wavelength as a lot of people this week...
https://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?s=&threadid=69051
Check my reply (the long one) to GONZO-X in the mp3 clinic... posted 2 hours before yours

I SWEAR I just read about this very thing on mercenary audio yesterday... and it's very true.
This is from that thread:
(please clue me in when it seems I've lost it

)
cheap pre's & non-musical distortion
...Apparently, cheap pre's distort the signal in an "unmusical" way, causing stacked tracks to sound "unfocused". This happened with J-Station trax on my rock tune.... could be described as "blurry". You could be using a good mic (SM57), but the low-level odd-harmonics (11ths, 13ths, etc) in the track which you probably couldn't hear soloed would just end up sounding really cloudy after a few trax are added.
I just tried mic'ing an amp with a self-powered Rode NTK last night, adding only about 10db of gain with the pre-amp, and it was a major difference. The tracks dang near mixed themselves!
----
Now, is that information technically right? Isn't the distortion caused by cheap pre's (at low levels) what clouds up mixes, esp. when tracks are layered? Could it be analogous to some kind of low-level dissonance, even, since we're talking about odd-harmonics like 9ths, 11ths, etc?
Seems like there'd be a way to measure how much a certain preamp distorts (colors) a signal, to know when you're driving it too hard... (or driving it to distort "unmusically")
Please feel free to jump in at any moment and declare what I'm guessing at as "total crap"
Thanks!
Chad