C
colimofsmoke
Member
I'm recording a lot right now, and Ive been doing this:
2 takes with different amp settings
3 mics: one sm57 on the speaker, and akg perception on another speaker, and another akg in the room about 6 feet away from the cab.
Then I pick and choose from the mics the two tracks that mix the best, which oddly isn't always the same. Then I play with the panning until it sounds huge, no real rule. Sometimes the thing that works the best doesn't seem to make sense. But I do usually start with the formula up top:
First Take: 1L 1R
Second Take: 2L 2R
End Mix: 1L+2R 1R+2L
And then go from there.
Barring having two mics, I do 4 takes, 2 on one channel with different eq settings, and two on a dif channel or mode on the Mesa roadster I had. Worked pretty well. You could try takes with different boosts or what have you. In general, I've always found trying to eq or delay and pan copies of the same take to just plain not work, whether with synth, guitar, whatever.
2 takes with different amp settings
3 mics: one sm57 on the speaker, and akg perception on another speaker, and another akg in the room about 6 feet away from the cab.
Then I pick and choose from the mics the two tracks that mix the best, which oddly isn't always the same. Then I play with the panning until it sounds huge, no real rule. Sometimes the thing that works the best doesn't seem to make sense. But I do usually start with the formula up top:
First Take: 1L 1R
Second Take: 2L 2R
End Mix: 1L+2R 1R+2L
And then go from there.
Barring having two mics, I do 4 takes, 2 on one channel with different eq settings, and two on a dif channel or mode on the Mesa roadster I had. Worked pretty well. You could try takes with different boosts or what have you. In general, I've always found trying to eq or delay and pan copies of the same take to just plain not work, whether with synth, guitar, whatever.