Steve Smyth said:(Like that old commercial. some may get this)Ancient Stevie secret!
Just kidding, Megamore!
To be honest, I've been trying it all kinds of ways, and at this point, it's been mostly double tracking rhythms, and very little duplication. Although, that said, if you EQ and slap a little delay on the "duped" track(s), you can make it sound like you slaved for hours and hours. I'm mainly doing it the hard way, keeping it real, ya know?
No, I here ya there, Guru! It's not as good, but is a technique nonetheless that can work in certain situations ( i.e. strumming steady 16th note rhythm)guitarguru777 said:BUT IT NEVER SOUNDS AS GOOD IF YOU DO THE DELAY THING .... For best results play everything multiple times.
4 tracks of rythm ALWAYS !!!!
Read the cheesebag recording thread we all been contributing too. Its worth it !!!
If you can believe, Andy had us do 4, two for each side! Slave driver! But, ah the result!megamore said:Thank you very much for answering, Steve I'm very curious to know this: did you and Jeff both play two tracks of rhythm guitars each for This Godless Endeavor without duplicating?
Hey Lord,lordofthesewers said:btw Steve, did you double the solos on TGE too? I really can't see how one could double jeff's TGE solo and the psalm of lydia solo trade passage.
True, LT1Z, but the hardest thing about doubling anything is listening to the nuance of everything you did in the previous track. For example, if you played something a little loose on an upbeat, but the "vibe" is there, then you gotta play the second track the same way you played the other one, or it will fall apart.[/QUOTE]Steve Smyth said:I have found 2 rhythm tracks is fine for thrash, if you want that wall of sound...like a godsmack cd or something it's more like 4 tracks (tough to do unless you are playing mostly barre chords
lordofthesewers said:this thread is really useful, it should be made sticky or merged with the threads that are sticky guru made about home recording[/QUOTE
By request, this thread will now be a sticky.