aramism
Member
i think it depends on the situation, the player, and the producer.
like arch enemy sounded great quad tracked because it opened up production and made it sound HUGE but at the same time amotts are REALLY good. same thing with james hetfield, he is one of the tightest players ever. when you are talking about players of this caliber and then trying to quad track and EP for an up and coming metal band you may not get favorable results. i think if someone can play on a professional level of tightness then quad tracking for certain styles will make it sound bigger especially when using differnt amps and settings and whatnot however certain styles of music like lamb of god for instance which is counter-intuitive from the traditional metal recoding double may work better for.
double tracking has been around since multitrack recording. for classic rock if you listen to like led zep III or the stones a lot of time it made it seem wider because different part would be played on both sides. it sounded cool. a recent cd i was listening to that i picked up on that was the black crowes. a lot of songs notable their popular ones are double tracked but like one side will play a more steady rhythm the other side will have a more accented "rhythmic" picking and it makes the stereo field super wide and funky. so it comes back to what a few people along with myself have said so far that it really just depends on the genre, players, and overall situation.
like arch enemy sounded great quad tracked because it opened up production and made it sound HUGE but at the same time amotts are REALLY good. same thing with james hetfield, he is one of the tightest players ever. when you are talking about players of this caliber and then trying to quad track and EP for an up and coming metal band you may not get favorable results. i think if someone can play on a professional level of tightness then quad tracking for certain styles will make it sound bigger especially when using differnt amps and settings and whatnot however certain styles of music like lamb of god for instance which is counter-intuitive from the traditional metal recoding double may work better for.
double tracking has been around since multitrack recording. for classic rock if you listen to like led zep III or the stones a lot of time it made it seem wider because different part would be played on both sides. it sounded cool. a recent cd i was listening to that i picked up on that was the black crowes. a lot of songs notable their popular ones are double tracked but like one side will play a more steady rhythm the other side will have a more accented "rhythmic" picking and it makes the stereo field super wide and funky. so it comes back to what a few people along with myself have said so far that it really just depends on the genre, players, and overall situation.