L
Lewguitar
Guest
Very interesting.
I was brought in to add some soulful R&B guitar (think Rainy Night In Georgia...) to some gospel flavored tracks a local keyboardist had recorded.
There was already some guitar on the tracks recorded by a local hot shot and some nice sax work by another local player.
The engineer told me that the guitarist was the loudest guitarist he'd ever worked with.
I brought my Strat with the Surfers and my modded Fender Princeton Reverb that Bruce turned into my favorite amp. It's like a combination of a vintage Vox, vintage Marshall and a vintage blackface Fender with reverb.
I didn't use any effects - just a Geurge L cord between my Strat and the amp.
Dialed in a cleanish tone and didn't turn the amp up past 3 or 4.
I recut the rythym and lead guitar parts and replaced most of the sax parts. Took a couple of hours or less.
Yesterday the engineer brought in the CD and I've been listening to it.
It's very interesting because they did leave some of the sax on it and did leave a couple of fills that the other guitarist recorded.
He played very loud in the studio and his tone is thin, squeezed and buzzy!
I played quietly and even my soloing tone is fat and full with a nice bloom to it and real nice sustain - and it jumps out of the mix.
I'm not bragging here, but it is interesting that my clean tone sounds louder and fuller and better than this other guy's tone.
He's a real good player - but his tone didn't work at all and sounds small, even though he played loudly when he recorded it.
I was brought in to add some soulful R&B guitar (think Rainy Night In Georgia...) to some gospel flavored tracks a local keyboardist had recorded.
There was already some guitar on the tracks recorded by a local hot shot and some nice sax work by another local player.
The engineer told me that the guitarist was the loudest guitarist he'd ever worked with.
I brought my Strat with the Surfers and my modded Fender Princeton Reverb that Bruce turned into my favorite amp. It's like a combination of a vintage Vox, vintage Marshall and a vintage blackface Fender with reverb.
I didn't use any effects - just a Geurge L cord between my Strat and the amp.
Dialed in a cleanish tone and didn't turn the amp up past 3 or 4.
I recut the rythym and lead guitar parts and replaced most of the sax parts. Took a couple of hours or less.
Yesterday the engineer brought in the CD and I've been listening to it.
It's very interesting because they did leave some of the sax on it and did leave a couple of fills that the other guitarist recorded.
He played very loud in the studio and his tone is thin, squeezed and buzzy!
I played quietly and even my soloing tone is fat and full with a nice bloom to it and real nice sustain - and it jumps out of the mix.
I'm not bragging here, but it is interesting that my clean tone sounds louder and fuller and better than this other guy's tone.
He's a real good player - but his tone didn't work at all and sounds small, even though he played loudly when he recorded it.