Kaleiwahea":3hc2ze89 said:
My vote for best "stand alone" tone is Chubtone. When I was watching the videos of "J-Luge" (that's my pet name for him)editing this thing, Chub's part was one that was solo'd and I thought "Holy Crap, that is a great tone!!". Unfortunately, that is a great example of a tone that sounds stellar by itself, but gets a little lost in the mix. I don't mean any offense by that Chub, and I wouldn't have brought it up if you hadn't asked about it. In a recording session for your cd that you should be doing

, it could easily be post eq'd to stand out more and it could sound in the mix very similar to what it sounds like by itself - like I said, it's an awesome tone; best one on there, imo. I just see an opportunity here for us all to learn a little bit, that's all.
Mark,
My CD is done man. It's been done for 6 months but I haven't put the artwork together to "release" it. I've been trying to do it myself and failing and lagging on it. I should try and find someone to help me.
Your post is exactly what I'm looking for. I was also laying in bed last night wondering if there were 26 other guitarists that played on that thinking "everyone else is loud enough but I should be louder".

And I'm wondering if the woofiness of the low strings when I'm muffling send the track level up high but makes it get lost in the mix. You said lost in the mix but James said my level is the same as other guys so that tells me I need to learn to EQ better to get something to sit right. Also my monitors might make it goofy since they're what I mixed on and they may have a frequency present that better quality ones don't and I mix for these?
Did you listen to my solo at the Soundclick link I posted?
https://www.soundclick.com/util/getplaye ... 82798&q=hi
In that it doesn't seem to get as lost but still doesn't jump out. When you listen to my link, what should I do differently? Thanks to Mark or anyone else in advance!