T
timeroo
New member
After watching this video, his technique would work for demos and such but one major thing he doesn't mention is that when quad tracking or even just dual tracking you should differ your tones slightly or more than slightly. When what's being played is the same, I dual or triple track but I use two guitar tones and I pan them 30R/center/30L or 30R/30L. When there's two parts happening rhythm wise I will quad track with two tones. Two tracks of one tone panned 30/30 and two tracks of another tone panned 30/30. Then I slap an EQ on each side with slightly different settings. For me, this creates a full tone because the holes left by one tone are filled in by another. I am surprised that he didn't touch on this.