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Modular Amps
Rigs & Tones
The great recording, EQ-ing, IR's and other stuff thread!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="Julia" data-source="post: 65617" data-attributes="member: 1784"><p>Some of us use RTAS. I've got a email into Recabinet to get info to see if it works with Pro Tools. </p><p></p><p>The thing about EQ is that if it sounds lifeless after you kill the hell out of the hissy stuff is that you can always add back a little bit at a time until you get it where you want it. And this is why you ALWAYs record one track of the guitar itself dry before the amp for stuff like reamping. I'm a huge fan of reamping.</p><p></p><p>For Bass: run the bass behind the kick unless the music calls for the bass line to be more out there (like a jazz track). And don't forget that some basses have a nasty resonance freq where they boom over everything else. So you get out your frequency analyzer and check where that is and knock that down with a plugin on the bass channel.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Julia, post: 65617, member: 1784"] Some of us use RTAS. I've got a email into Recabinet to get info to see if it works with Pro Tools. The thing about EQ is that if it sounds lifeless after you kill the hell out of the hissy stuff is that you can always add back a little bit at a time until you get it where you want it. And this is why you ALWAYs record one track of the guitar itself dry before the amp for stuff like reamping. I'm a huge fan of reamping. For Bass: run the bass behind the kick unless the music calls for the bass line to be more out there (like a jazz track). And don't forget that some basses have a nasty resonance freq where they boom over everything else. So you get out your frequency analyzer and check where that is and knock that down with a plugin on the bass channel. [/QUOTE]
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Modular Amps
Rigs & Tones
The great recording, EQ-ing, IR's and other stuff thread!!!
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