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#31
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oh, i used the avalon di before on bass......it was fantastic! the pre wasn't so good on kick, but great as a bass di. |
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#32
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I usually tend to use whatever is available. I'm not really that much gear focused, but love to experiment.
About a year ago I recorded with a rock trio. Fighting up against 2 (sometimes more) stereo recorded guitarparts, and a drummer who hits about as hard as Dave Grohl or the likes. I used a London City all-tube 70's guitar head, plugged into an Ampeg 4 x 10 (not my own by the way; as I said: I use what's available). Then another line went into a Dynacord 1x15 combo. Both were miked. ANOTHER line went to a small overdriven Squier 15 watt guitar combo. So, thats 3 amp lines + DI. Plenty of opportunity to exploit these different sounds while mixing. I think you can imagine the wall of sound this EP produced Rock trio.. uhu.. sounded like a rock orchestra Another project with African music was recorded simply with a Line 6 basspod. Which I'm not a fan of by the way, but it does the job well enough for a demo. What I would prefer to always use is 1) (tube/active) DI (Sansamp, Aguilar, Ampeg) 2) My own amp + cab miked (HA5000 + Bag End 210) 3) Tube guitar combo (works wonders on a fretless aswell with some reverb) miked 'Bout the basses I have a custom built 5 string, which is active/passive, J/MM J. It's versatile as can be, and hardly feel the need to do anything on amp equalizing. Alternatively, I use one of my two fretless Jazzes; One vintage Fender (defretted; don't shoot me; I didn't pull 'em out!!) and an Asian copy. Let me tell you one thing; both of these are absolutely great. The Asian copy (multiplex body) has a very funny character, and it records well. Funny = it tends to jave almost too much growl. Cheap instruments can be great gimmicks, and this one certainly is. Just adding this because you may wonder why I still use the copy when I have a '77 original... So, thats about it. Recording is one thing, mixing is another. Mixing has a lot more influence on your sound than recording. For recording, imho just try to get everything on 'tape' clearly, I worry about sound when the mixing process sets in. Studios always give you a wrong impression. The monitors have excellent bass sound usually, and you'll think it sounds great. Don't mix in one day, take a temp mix home and use all kinds of systems like car stereo, home system, small boombox etc. Try to get it to sound good on every system ![]() |
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#33
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Hmm was looking for an edit function but it's taking too long to find. Edit: Aha, there it is.. can't edit old messages
![]() Wanted to add a real cool thing; Recorded a fretless a while ago, and it seemed like the sound was missing something. I wanted to go for a more acoustic sound, but without an acoustic bass: We took the electric signal again, but this time close-miked the (electric) bass near the neck, while standing in a hallway. This produced an awesome sound! People who heard the recording thought it was a double bass, which was kinda the idea. This was a singer-songwriter recording, which 'needed' sort of an electric-acoustic earthy sound. Mission accomplished, I guess. With a bit of creativity and unconventional thinking you might get some great results. |
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