Every time I record distorted guitars at home, I always end up with a boomy, fizzy sound. I can get a thicker, less fizzy sound by cranking the amp past 8, but then I also end up with something that sounds a bit muffled and muddy. When I try to remedy this via post-EQ, I find that in order to reduce the fizz, I have to set the LPF as low as 2300Hz, and in order to get a tighter bottom end, I have to set the HPF as high as 240Hz. And even then, the results are lackluster.
Is it possible that these issues are the result of tracking at home, in an untreated room? Has anyone ever had a chance to compare a home recording to a studio recording using the same gear and settings? If yes, what differences did you observe?
In one of the pinned threads with Colin Richardson, Colin talks about tracks that have been recorded cleanly. What does he mean by cleanly, and is it possible to get clean tracks from a home recording in an untreated room?
And lastly, if we take the guitar tracks in "Mr. Crowley" for example, Max Norman recorded those tracks with 4 SM57's kitty-cornered on a full-stack, a U87 further back in the room, and a U87 just outside the room. The bottom end on Randy's tracks is the textbook example of what I consider tight. How big do you think is the difference between what the setup sounded like in the room, and what ended on the final product? How extensive might the post-tracking processing have been in order to get a result like that?
Attached is a short sample recording to give you an idea of what I am grappling with.
Is it possible that these issues are the result of tracking at home, in an untreated room? Has anyone ever had a chance to compare a home recording to a studio recording using the same gear and settings? If yes, what differences did you observe?
In one of the pinned threads with Colin Richardson, Colin talks about tracks that have been recorded cleanly. What does he mean by cleanly, and is it possible to get clean tracks from a home recording in an untreated room?
And lastly, if we take the guitar tracks in "Mr. Crowley" for example, Max Norman recorded those tracks with 4 SM57's kitty-cornered on a full-stack, a U87 further back in the room, and a U87 just outside the room. The bottom end on Randy's tracks is the textbook example of what I consider tight. How big do you think is the difference between what the setup sounded like in the room, and what ended on the final product? How extensive might the post-tracking processing have been in order to get a result like that?
Attached is a short sample recording to give you an idea of what I am grappling with.