Fairly New to this. - Printable Version +- Discussion Zone (http://discussion.cambridge-mt.com) +-- Forum: 'Mixing Secrets' Free Multitrack Download Library: mixing forum (http://discussion.cambridge-mt.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=184) +--- Forum: Rock, Punk, Metal (http://discussion.cambridge-mt.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +---- Forum: Forkupines: 'Sleep By The Fire, Bloom In Water' (http://discussion.cambridge-mt.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=327) +---- Thread: Fairly New to this. (/showthread.php?tid=12747) |
Fairly New to this. - fjuarez3 - 11-11-2015 I have gotten advice from other people who have studied sound engineering but now trying to put it to practice. Let me know how it sounds. RE: Fairly New to this. - wurstdrummer - 14-11-2015 Hey fjuarez3, I think you messed up the guitars a bit. They sound a bit thin and sharp and there's basically only noise audible. Let them breath a little more. Guitars need to sound heavy, not gritty. The rest sounds fine to me. Cheers! RE: Fairly New to this. - fjuarez3 - 15-11-2015 Thanks, I am just wondering how you can them sound heavy and not gritty? I changed the plug in and hoping maybe this is in the right direction? RE: Fairly New to this. - wurstdrummer - 15-11-2015 One of the biggest things I've learned was that a not-so-heavy distortion often creates a fatter sound than high gain. Plus, the tracks I provided are already amped, you don't need to send them through another amp RE: Fairly New to this. - fjuarez3 - 15-11-2015 Thanks, That makes total sense and I hope the second post attachment sounds better. I will keep that in mind as I keep practicing on other songs. |