If you want a neat tone, mic your acoustic with any mic about 12-14" away and point it straight at the point where neck meets body. Pan that far left or right, then throw an acoustic pickup on, and pan that to the remaining side. If you track it just right and maybe mix a couple channels, you can really get a warm crisp pleasant sounding acoustic that leaves the listening asking "hmm, i wonder how he recorded that."
Now that I have actually listened to the song I have realized that it is an electric at the beginning.
Try Eq'ing each of the tracks and adding a little more upper end. Also panning the drums in any fashion whatsoever would really rip this mix open nicely. I like the bass though, sounds pretty neat. Your guitar in the back sits nicely, but once again maybe tune down its phasyness. This could sound really cool.
I like the drums in the slow parts. Just remember, less is more when recording beats like that. Being a drummer myself, amongst other things, try focus on less anticipation of th beat, especially in slow areas, because it lets the rest of the mix move itself along. So just slightly delay the snare beat, just barely... just enough so that its not moving the mix forward. I really like the accents on hi-hats with kick etc. Throw a few triplets on the snare and fills in there. At 4:28 when the rimclicks start, I like that. Reminds me of the song "birdland". This is still sounding pretty cool. Toss some distant vocals on, and this could sound pretty neat. Good work man. Rock on