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Rivek

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Posts posted by Rivek

  1. Unless the amp has a clearly marked LINE OUT jack,

    It does. Chill.

    If you MUST record without a DI box, go right into the soundcard from your bass, it'll sound much better than through the amp output. Generally I've found that basses sound best recorded totally dry, the DI signal is always my main bass channel, anything I add is sent to an FX track and kept relatively low. Again, I can't stress it enough, get a DI box. And avoid those "SUPER TUBE DI BOX WITH A REAL TUBE INSIDE FOR WARMTH!!!!!" they always add a shit ton of noise.

    See, I'd like to go straight to the soundcard without any kind of preamp, but every time I do something like that it carries a lot of noise from the impedance mismatch.

  2. Really, I'm surprised people care that much to prove me (a reggae guitar player) wrong. It really is all a perspective thing, anyway.

    And I couldn't care less how you define metal. Zakk Wylde to Kerry King to Meshugga to Old Man Gloom, it's all the same to me.

    And guess what? None of them have an EQ curve that looks like a dopey smile.

    Anyways, snappleman is right. Huge tone changes before your signal hits the soundcard is a bad idea as it is, since it locks you too much in one tonal space.

  3. This is the most frustrating thing I have ever encountered. I'm not sure if it's the bass I'm using, the preamp, I don't know.

    I'm running a Yamaha bass, not sure of the model, through a Crate bass combo as a replacement for a DI box, into Reaper. Recording the bass just gives me the signal from the combo itself, so I have to play insanely softly even with the gain on the amp turned down to barely registering to keep the signal from clipping.

    I did this same thing with guitar on a small guitar combo, and it worked beautifully. Not only could I play as hard or as soft as I wanted, but my monitor output during recording had my FX chain active. However, with the bass, the monitor output is just the clean signal, and the FX chain isn't becoming active until after I record. I try to use FX to make it hearable in the mix (Eq, already carved space for it from the guitars and drums, compressor, etc.) but nothing is working.

    Somebody help me. What can I do to get a decent recording of a bass guitar? I come to you as a broken man. F'ing bass.

  4. And I'm sticking with my scooped mids for metal comment, noob or not. You don't want to scoop them post, but recording with them scooped from the amp is just fine.

    No it's not, it doesn't work. ESPECIALLY not for metal. Kerry King actually boosts his mids and dips his bass and treble a bit; are you going to tell Slayer they don't know how to do metal right?

    As a gigging and recording guitarist I was searching for my magic tone for a good while before I settled on my current preferred tone for clean and distorted parts, which is a boosted-mid curve. It sounds better and cuts through the mix better.

  5. You've got it all wrong man! XD

    I pity you if you don't see any "point" to a non-serious project... for me the joy of making music is just that. Making it. Whether I'm trying to actually send a message or just mess around with it, the whole "point" for me to working on any kind of musical project is that I enjoy it. If you don't see it the same way... I'm sorry. It's really cool my way and I'd rather not have it any other.

    As to the feedback, I like hearing what people think of the music no matter what. I mean, pointing out things like "the mixing is bad" or "this doesn't sound right" or technical stuff like that, yeah, I won't really regard. But I like feedback regardless.

    And as to the songs not being good... well I guess I just got your opinion. XD. I'm not going for any awards here. For me Seizures Inc. is a space with no clear or definable goals... means to no specific end but the means themselves.

  6. Yeah, I realized when I listened to the song shortly after posting the thread that the actual playing of the bass is staccato. I guess the part about it that made it "glide-y" in my own mind was how it picks up the low end when the kick is silent.

    Apparently then, what I'm looking for is that beefy timbre it has. I need more punchiness... would adding an EQ boost to the low and mids help that? Maybe some distortion?

  7. I'm messing around with a trance track for a few hours now, and I'm trying to get a certain bass synth sound that I can't seem to get... I want it to be something that slightly glides in from nowhere, an eight note after the beat, an example being the bassline on the Alice Deejay song "Better off Alone".

    I'm using a single square wave with low attack and release, high sustain, and a LP24 with a low cutoff. Portamento and Legato are enabled on the synth I'm using. What more can I do to get a cool, glide-y, off-beat sound?

  8. Okay. Few changes:

    Took out the strings and replaced them with the pads you suggested, so as not to have too many sustained instruments at once. Changed bass synths to a punchier generator, and added sfx in what I hope is a decent balance throughout the mix.

    Thanks for the suggestions, and if you have any more, let me know. :)

  9. If you're really, really looking for a way to make it stereo, even though it's not totally necessary... in audacity, duplicate the mono track, position the duplicate one track below the original, click the drop-down menu on the original and select "make stereo track".

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