JOLLY
Super Simonologist
Recorded bass tones.
You know, whenever I do any recording, the bass is usually the very last thing that I record. I know I do it completely bass ackwards (no pun intended) as opposed to the way most people record. The "standard" is to do the bass and drums together as the main tracks before the guitars and vocals come in. However, I've pretty much always recorded my bass second to last, right before I do my solos. I always do my solos last because I pretty much have the entire backing track layed out for me.
Anyways, and especially for those of you that record a lot, have you ever noticed that your bass just doesn't sound the way you want it when you hear it by itself as opposed to how you hear it when in the context of the recorded song?
I've recorded countless times in my life. However, there's one thing that I've always noticed. Some of the best bass tones that I've ever heard on their own are completely crappy sounding in the mix of a certain song. On one song it may sound great, but on another song with the same guitar tone, it may sound horrible.
The greatest thing about this for me is youtube, believe it or not. I used to have all these great bass tones that I thought would work for my songs, and then when I would go to record my songs, the bass sounded like total crap. So, I would fart around and play my song back while I twiddled with the knobs on the bass amp. I would get a great tone for the song, and it would sound amazing for the song, and then I would listen back to the isolated bass, and it would sound like crap...lol.
I'll give you a few prime examples. I have always absolutely loved the bass tone on Jet City Woman by Queensryche. It is just so nice and clean with a fantastic amount of bass, yet a sweet brightness combined.
I decided to get that tone the other day with my Spector bass, and it freaked me out. I listened to the song, but I had a somewhat hard time dialing in the tone. I was close, but I wasn't. Then I listened to an isolated bass video of it. It blew my mind, man.
I was soooo far away with my settings that you wouldn't believe. I sat here for about an hour or two, and I dialed in that bass tone perfectly. It was about as far from hell as you would think that bass tone was. After listening to the isolated version, I ended up with a completely distorted bass tone, with the bass on ), the mids on about 1, and the treble on about 7. Now mind you, I was using a modeled SVT, and I had the hi frequency on about 9 and the bass frequency on about 4.
Anyways, we'll get back to the conversation in a bit.
This is the song with everything:
You know, whenever I do any recording, the bass is usually the very last thing that I record. I know I do it completely bass ackwards (no pun intended) as opposed to the way most people record. The "standard" is to do the bass and drums together as the main tracks before the guitars and vocals come in. However, I've pretty much always recorded my bass second to last, right before I do my solos. I always do my solos last because I pretty much have the entire backing track layed out for me.
Anyways, and especially for those of you that record a lot, have you ever noticed that your bass just doesn't sound the way you want it when you hear it by itself as opposed to how you hear it when in the context of the recorded song?
I've recorded countless times in my life. However, there's one thing that I've always noticed. Some of the best bass tones that I've ever heard on their own are completely crappy sounding in the mix of a certain song. On one song it may sound great, but on another song with the same guitar tone, it may sound horrible.
The greatest thing about this for me is youtube, believe it or not. I used to have all these great bass tones that I thought would work for my songs, and then when I would go to record my songs, the bass sounded like total crap. So, I would fart around and play my song back while I twiddled with the knobs on the bass amp. I would get a great tone for the song, and it would sound amazing for the song, and then I would listen back to the isolated bass, and it would sound like crap...lol.
I'll give you a few prime examples. I have always absolutely loved the bass tone on Jet City Woman by Queensryche. It is just so nice and clean with a fantastic amount of bass, yet a sweet brightness combined.
I decided to get that tone the other day with my Spector bass, and it freaked me out. I listened to the song, but I had a somewhat hard time dialing in the tone. I was close, but I wasn't. Then I listened to an isolated bass video of it. It blew my mind, man.
I was soooo far away with my settings that you wouldn't believe. I sat here for about an hour or two, and I dialed in that bass tone perfectly. It was about as far from hell as you would think that bass tone was. After listening to the isolated version, I ended up with a completely distorted bass tone, with the bass on ), the mids on about 1, and the treble on about 7. Now mind you, I was using a modeled SVT, and I had the hi frequency on about 9 and the bass frequency on about 4.
Anyways, we'll get back to the conversation in a bit.
This is the song with everything: