James Murphy
Member
- Mar 26, 2002
- 4,481
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i'm sorry Hoppy...but you're wrong on a couple of points... there is nothing at all wrong with using the same tone for all four tracks.. or two tracks.. on an album.. it is done every day and many of the killer albums we all quote and love and put into our "now playing" fields when we post were done in exactly that way.. same sound, same mic, same guitar.. everything.. including many of the albums i have played on over the years.. like for instance Disincarnate "Dreams of the Carrion Kind" which was produced by Colin Richardson. in fact, using the same setup for each pass is the easiest way to not have phasing problems, so you are mistaken on that one. playing through different amps can still be great... great way to "stack tones"... but you do it with one performance, with an amp-splitter, then do that once or three more times with the same setup.. depending on ifyou want double or quad tracking. stacking tones, or blending amps, is a great way to get cool new, unique guitar sounds.. but it is not the way to "thicken" up your sound.. not the best way anyway... that is accomplished by the subtle differences in the 2 or 4 performances... even when they are played very tightly.. indeed they MUST be played tightly or you just have slop.. but as tight as you can get there are still differences that are greater than the sum of the parts... they are what you are after... making a good sound, be it with one or multiple amps, is a given.
i think you got the phasing thing from something else: if you just make a digital copy of one track and pan it to the opposite side the result will sound mono.. same thing if you take one performance from a D.I. track and re-amp it through 2 different amps and pan them.. mono, with a tone that is a combo of the two amps... but mono nonetheless. now, if you offset one of the copies of the guitar track by several milliseconds you can create a "fake stereo" simulation.. but if you are not very careful with choosing the offset you will get a phasey, thin, washy sound... the results of comb-filtering... avoid this by always playing each guitar track each time.. no digital copying silliness. i hope this clears up some of the confusion.
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i think you got the phasing thing from something else: if you just make a digital copy of one track and pan it to the opposite side the result will sound mono.. same thing if you take one performance from a D.I. track and re-amp it through 2 different amps and pan them.. mono, with a tone that is a combo of the two amps... but mono nonetheless. now, if you offset one of the copies of the guitar track by several milliseconds you can create a "fake stereo" simulation.. but if you are not very careful with choosing the offset you will get a phasey, thin, washy sound... the results of comb-filtering... avoid this by always playing each guitar track each time.. no digital copying silliness. i hope this clears up some of the confusion.
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