Thanks to those who have answered so far. I'll give you guys some background. I frequent a bass player's forum and that attitude is some of the best stuff I've ever seen at a forum. Very helpful. The metal presence is very small though as well as the people into recording. You'll hear more talk about great DI's and so on. Which I do agree is important.
I have been playing finger style for 15 years now and going to a pick to play what I play now on my fingers is not an option. Sadly, many of my favorite tones for bass come from pick players. Some metal, many of them punk. I teach bass and hear lots of different sounds. Usually when I hear a sound I really like, I look up the player and find out it's an Ampeg SVT2 with a pick and a Jazz bass.
I really dig Steve DiGiorgio's playing. I've met him a few times and he's very cool about talking gear. He does have quite a few tones from project to project. But it's hard to miss him when you hear him. On some of the Death stuff I think his bass wasn't placed well in the mix. Especially on "Human" of course. "Individual Thought Patters" was way better but the low notes were subtle as the higher lines chirped out more. I think he's got great tone on the Control Denied stuff. The guitars are not of the modern or current sound on that album though if that makes any sense. More razor blade sounding wich did leave some room in my opinion. We've joked at times about the volumes of his bass level. Once he signed a bunch of my CD sleeves with his name and "NB" next to it for albums where you could hear "no bass" I've been at times compared to the man (not that I agree) but because I move around quite a bit at times. I've chilled out some over the past few years but it's hard to find a tone that affords the supporting; In Flames for example, and the busy; Sadus for example.
I am a 6-string bass player. I don't use the high "C" too much these days and I'm not worried too much about that tone, I can control that. I am worried about getting articulation with the lower strings without making the next few strings sound too brittle. We tune to "D" but at times the guitarist uses a 7-string. We don't hang out on those low "A"s, so I don't like to say we tune to "A", it's very seldom and we never really have more than one or two riffs rooted off those strings. Usually just to extend some chords and such. The drums are done for the album and we are doing pre-production guitars right now, making sure everything is cool seeing we lost a guitarist and the remaining guy has to learn all those 2nd parts. I brought some CD's to the studio .Not to rip a tone but find a tone that he was already close to and then try to match the life of it in a recording medium. We came closest to Exodus "Shovel Headed.." So the guitars blister more than crunch in my opinion.
Now if you guys were part of the bass player forum I mentioned earlier, they would say it's all in the players hands. I believe this to a very large extent. That's why I still have not lost the drive to practice my ass off after all these years. But any thoughts would be helpful. Be it, amp's, compression techniques, distortion and so on. I would say the band is thrashy, but not too old school, we like old and modern. We have some progressive undertones as well. I know it's very important for the guitars to be right up there and I've made the sacrafice many times for lack of a better approach with tone on my instrument. This is our first full length as this band and I want to set the bar.
Any how, I hope this info helps and was a good waste of your time!!!!. Thanks in advance for all your help.