Hello all. I've been working in my own home studio for about 3 years learning how to mix my own projects. I'm looking for some advice as I am now getting better sound quality at the source (Using Kemper for guitars and bass). I find that I was able to use mics to get a good metal mix, but now that I have really upped the quality at the source it has completely changed the final mix.
I also usually double track guitars, but our guitarist insists that we do quad tracking, because "that is how it is supposed to be done". IMO, I can get 2 guitars to sound better than 4 any day.
So a quick outline of my workflow:
I record everything into SONAR, then bounce Stems to go to final mix
Drums: Record drums with 2 overheads and a room mic, 100% replace kick and Just a tiny little bit of blended trigger on the snare. Everything else is Dry and EQ'd and gated (toms and snare). I edit the drums to be really close to the click.
Bass: 1 DI track which I use primarily for lows, 1 track through an AMPEG profile on kemper
GTR: This is the first time I've tried quad tracking, 4 really kick ass profiles (2 5150's, a Diesel and maybe one other that I cannot recall ) panned 80% and 100%
I then bounce down stereo stems of GTR, BASS (I use hi/low pass on each of the 2 tracks), Kick, Snare, Toms, Room/OH and send to REAPER to get a final mix and polish on everything.
I adjust the shape/EQ, verb etc as best I can to get everything to sit well and to still have that heaviness... I feel like the Guitars are just too much or too little, really hard to find the right spot. Also, I'm not sure if I am compressing too much or too little on my master. the guitar tone changes so much with even just a little shift in compression.
Anyhow... I feel like I'm starting all over again with this new gear and the quad tracking. Can anyone give me some advice on what steps I should take here? I'm just not at all happy with my mix.
I will attach images so you can see the settings on my Master limiter:

And also A PAZ Analyzer so you can see what I'm working with across the board:

Last edited by a moderator: