So I've noticed as of late that with almost every 'check out my tone' clip I've heard around this place, the tones are pretty heavy on the fizz. That's cool, if it floats your boat, but seriously, are there any people left around that still like Clayman? Are there some of us that like some meat and balls in our guitars? I get that the fizz thing is a new trend, but have any of you stopped to think whether those absurd amounts of higher frequency spikes actually sound beneficial to a mix?
I was browsing through some of my ancient recordings and I found a clip of one of the first times I mic'ed an amp. Would've been maybe the 3rd or 4th recording I did. I booted it up and was amazed to hear that the tone blew away everything I've come to expect in reamps these days and it suddenly shed a light on me. It's not that I've become obsessed with over-processing in a mix, but rather the tones are so far off the mark that I'm forced to. Listening to this clip made me remember instantly what the amp sounded like in the room, and IMO how a tone needs to sound.
Granted this was captured when I was still rather noobie, with a single SM57, but even listening now I'm a little impressed, because I certainly haven't had tones of this caliber to work with since.
Amp was a Bogner Ecstasy into a Bogner 2x12 cab with V30s. Single SM57, probably close to Andy position, running into a Control 24 preamp, going into a 96 i/o. Totally raw.
http://dl.getdropbox.com/u/285689/Forum/Rhythm.L 2_04.mp3
It's the whole track, so give it a few seconds to fire up and actually start playing.
PS. I wasn't the one playing. I'm nowhere near that loose, even when I try to be.
I was browsing through some of my ancient recordings and I found a clip of one of the first times I mic'ed an amp. Would've been maybe the 3rd or 4th recording I did. I booted it up and was amazed to hear that the tone blew away everything I've come to expect in reamps these days and it suddenly shed a light on me. It's not that I've become obsessed with over-processing in a mix, but rather the tones are so far off the mark that I'm forced to. Listening to this clip made me remember instantly what the amp sounded like in the room, and IMO how a tone needs to sound.
Granted this was captured when I was still rather noobie, with a single SM57, but even listening now I'm a little impressed, because I certainly haven't had tones of this caliber to work with since.
Amp was a Bogner Ecstasy into a Bogner 2x12 cab with V30s. Single SM57, probably close to Andy position, running into a Control 24 preamp, going into a 96 i/o. Totally raw.
http://dl.getdropbox.com/u/285689/Forum/Rhythm.L 2_04.mp3
It's the whole track, so give it a few seconds to fire up and actually start playing.
PS. I wasn't the one playing. I'm nowhere near that loose, even when I try to be.