jonl":y1jnr3g0 said:
Thanks everyone!
I have moved my MIC around a bunch...
It's all in post EQ that I am lost, sounds very nasally.
I don't have anything that is not mixed, but here's my vid's
https://www.youtube.com/user/jondano/videos?view=0
SM57 gonzo! I brought that back because I didn't like it at all.
Heil PR30 mic is 1000 times better that the SM57!
I deleted all my duplicates and will be redoing all the existing videos with the PR30.
Hey dude, this is actually the VH4...
I have been messing around with Herbert settings.
I have it on Channel 3 now.
Gain 10
Treble 2
Mid's maxed
Bass 3
Volume 1 not Volume 2
Deep 3
Presence 3
To get you the best solution we need to know all the contributing factors. I saw your tool video's and they sound great.
So your setup is a Silverburst Les Paul Custom into a Diezel VH4 into a Mesa 4x12 correct? Then the heli mic to apogee one into garage band.
Max mids/gain plus low volume is where your fizz is coming from. Run all the controls at noon and then record a track. You will be way loud for your bedroom so if you have a bigger room in the house with couches like a living room with taller ceilings that will help. When tracking i just use brick wall limiting just in case and 3 to 1 compression. I don't gate since I can just trim the noise out in my DAW. Post eq can be tricky. It really depends on taste and less is more IMO. If your just recording guitar I wouldn't use any at all. Notching EQ is so all the instruments have a place in the song with the mids,highs, and lows. If your floor tom,kick drum, bass player and guitar player are all fighting in the 50-150hz range or guitar singer,snare, rack toms, etc are fighting in the 500hz to 2kz section you need to make room for everything. The high's of the cymbals if not tamed will drown out the articulation of the singers voice and your guitar.
In short, recording is a set of compromises. Trying to make everything sound full while still being able to pick out all of the instruments and musical tones. Microphones are a speaker for better or worse. Air pushes across a metal diaphragm. Meaning with too much air you can compress and distort the mic signal itself. But I like to recording pretty hot. It just has a more in yo face sound. But you have to know the limitations of your gear. your mic is a ribbon so try not to completely blow it out, however leaning on it can produce some cools sounds without damage. Its like bending a ruler in your hands, it looks cool till it breaks. But that is why the studio is exciting, you get to push the limits.
Also its trial and error while your learning to record. I spent 3 years in a studio and I still don't know shit compared to the pro's. Recording is a science just like playing. You not going to have a great track just fall in your lap, takes lots of coffee and a sense of humor.