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  • you wanna be taking out the low end on guitar tracks usually...? there's enough as it is the low end is where your kick drum and bass guitar should be sitting in the mix! thats why you wanna quad track in my opinion! double track your lead double track your rhythm unless your running a mac you can use tonnes of channels

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  • @tommncradio sangat baik

  • dude your a fuckin idiot. the "smiley face" EQ is for mastering, when mixing guitar your meant to cut most the low end out along with some mids and add some high end/ downy

  • super helpfull ! thanks dude.

  • quad tracking is much more effective. but this was helpful!

  • dude im gonna sound really stupid cause im new to recording.. but you recorded the same track twice for left and right panning? isnt there a way of like "copying and pasting" the 1st track you recorded? and then selecting a left and a right on each track?

  • @06a09 that will cancel each other out and just end up centered, you need two different sound waves to seperate them

  • If you are running a interface, how come you chose stereo as the input???

  • @thephantomsguest using a line6 UX2. And to be honest only used stereo inputs out of a force of habit

  • @itsTempleofSound ok than answers the stereo widening lol

  • just woundering, approximately how loud do u have ur amp when u record?

  • @tizyler45 i used a plugin preamp for these recordings but when i do use an amp, night on 100 decibels. Basically things sound much quieter on recording so the louder you can get it the better

  • Why not just record the part once and clone the track pan 1 left the other right????

  • @MegaWoodcarver you would have to desync them otherwise it will still come out in the center as a single sample and if you do that you often get an artificial 'verby' sound. Sounds hallow

  • @MegaWoodcarver Try it. It will phase and sound awful. Shame though. Would make life a lot easier ;)

  • What you can also do instead of recording the doubletrack over again, is to use a plugin called Vacuumsound ADT (freeware) which simulates doubletracking by varying the delay between the two sides! really useful!

  • don´t you find ironic that every video about sound production needs to crank the hell up of your speakers so you can listen what they say??

    besides of that, congrats man, really cool an useful tips :D

  • @orionhellraiser lol, that is a good point... will work on that. Thanks for commenting, glad you enjoyed!!

  • tooo much distortion. it makes the picking sound fuzzy and makes me feel like the recording is shit. but everything else is very good. gj bro

  • The rode nt is my favorite mic!

  • nice vid. what vst distortion are you using in the DAW? thanks

  • absolutely useful video,thank you

  • nice tips

  • @ScrapBits thanks very much, glad to help

  • cubase for the win, this video explained a lot, thank you very much

  • @metalhead2theEnd really glad you found it useful, thanks for commenting

  • Your guitar tone is the BEST IVE ever heard... And I mean that.. Im a musician of 20 years,a nd I love it... What do u use to record?.. Also what sample rate do you record at?

  • @socialgrudge Thanks very much, it was recorded with guitar rig 3! good programme and oh so simple

  • Your guitar tone is the BEST IVE ever heard... And I mean that.. Im a musician of 20 years,a nd I love it... What do u use to record?.. Thanks

  • you say equalizer fuck i dont have nothing on my cubase and i dont know how to use anyting

  • @GuitaristEliKing i know its annoying but stick with it, two years ago i didn't know how to add a track, if you message me what exactly you're struggling with ill put up a video to do my best to explain.

  • i tried recording electric guitar and its smooth except at the start of the track, when it begins to play ,there is a jumping sound like it suddenly jumps ,maybe its because when i hit record theres nothing and then suddenly theres rhythm being played,and when i try to use compression the sound amplifies....

  • Awesome video thanks very much! One question - if you have a guitar and synthesizer (instead of the normal two guitar band setup) is it ok to pan both the synth and guitar tracks hard left/right or should they be separated?

  • @CosmicKeys it completely depends, in a recent track i double tracked the guitars and left the synth in the center, which both separated them and gave the impression that they were together, i think you can experiment but whatever you do dont pan one hard one way and the other hard the other, ull loose all power in the mix and all the layered texture of the band, even with a single guitar playing i would still double track and then simply place the synth where you want, thanks for the question!

  • Thats some good stuff there! Very informative and well explained. :) keep up the good work!

  • @ImbowProductions Thankyou very much, appreciate the comment

  • Thanks itsTempleofSound, nice tutorial. Regarding iquit123's question:- I have on (rare) occasions duplicated a track and compensated with wider eq. I know it's EXTREMELY bad practice, but I'm actually a drummer so I struggle playing something on guitar twice which sounds close enough to double track. Sad I know, but sometimes it's simply the lesser of two evils - may God forgive me, lol. The "split" component in Guitar Rig provides this function so it does... sort of work.

  • @xstevie666 cheers for commenting, yea i do think if the guitars arnt accurate on a second track then its fine to split like that, i often do on solo's ect (after all recording is all about making you sound better than you actually are :p)

  • Really helpful, thanks for sharing!

  • And hard panning is also crucial to a good mix,,you free up the center for the kick n bass so they stand out

  • @EnveBeats indeed, thanks for commenting

  • i have also a question for u sir. It's good for mono recording or stereo recording for each 1 track? to make a stereo. Which effect used for heavy guitar? ur sounds great to hear when u used eq. thanks for your Video.

  • i have a question sir.

    instead of tracking the guitars again, why not duplicate it?

  • @iquit123 well if you duplicate and leave at the same instance in the song ( ie dont shift the sample) then it wont make a difference to the stereo, the sound will remain centered, if you do nudge (about a millisecond or so) then it often sounds like a lesser tone and highly artificial. thanks for the q.

  • @iquit123 Also part of what gives it that sound is that recording the same thing twice,chances are there will be slight differences in the riff,,wich adds alot of depth

  • Woo, 1000th viewer...

    This was quite a useful tutorial. Cheers :D

  • Nice!! :) This helped me a lot!

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