Have fun!

It's not just recording 6 tracks...he blends clean guitars , dirt guitars, detuned guitars all EQ'd differently sprinkling Reverb and Delay where appropriate so their place in the mix doesn't step on each other or other instruments. He's also avoiding "phasing" between them. Good stuff!ID10t wrote: ↑Sun May 23, 2021 10:24 am Thanks for posting that, I watched the whole thing.
I intellectually understand the words that he spoke. I never will fully "get" it. If you want a massive rhythm track that sounds like 6 guitars, record it six times with slightly different settings, maybe different guitars, different amps.
I sound old and angry, while that is generally true, not here and now. The Beatles worked very hard in the studio and revolutionized some techniques for recording, and then stopped touring (more than one reason I know) because they couldn't reproduce the sound live. They broke up and all did more live performances.
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True if you want JUST the Rockman sound.
Nah, it works great for any DI signal! Using it after a load box or modeler would be superb!
I couldn't agree more. This may sound bizarre to some, but what I really miss in the production of most rock music today is "thin" guitar. I've been listening to a lot of isolated guitar tracks on YouTube, everything from Andy Summers, to EVH, Lynch, Schon, many others, and by current standards these guitar tones would be considered thin. But in the context of the band they allow dynamics, headroom, the sense of space that you elude to.Chocol8 wrote: ↑Mon May 24, 2021 3:36 pm I actually don’t want massive rhythm guitars. I usually want them to sit back and suggest the chord movement but leave plenty of space for bass, vocals, and other instruments in the mix. He went to great lengths with EQ and a pile of multiple tracks etc. to keep it from being a complete muddy, mess, but often more is less and less is more. In this case, play less notes and fewer stacked tracks and don’t let them drone across the entire measure. Let the bass add the tight bottom end and leave some space for the song to breath and to give the listeners’ ears some breaks.
Ala...John Entwhistle.Narsh wrote: ↑Sat May 29, 2021 8:50 pm This is great advice... I usually record four rhythm guitars, lately all Mesa Boogie Mark V models with different EQ settings and cabs. 2 tracks on the AxeFX and 2 on the Kemper. What really gives the sound "BALLS" is the bass. A heavy distorted bass goes a long way. But, this is in a metal context. I usually drop some gain for the pop/lighter stuff.
I thought bass players always had feelings of inadequacy, except in bands that have a banjo player to bring up the rear.Tonray's Ghost wrote: ↑Tue Jun 01, 2021 5:06 am Not to mention the feelings of inadequacy the bass player would suffer.