Cutting Through The Mix |
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Cutting Through The Mix |
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Mar 15 2010, 03:55 AM |
The short answer is this:
1. more mids 2. less bass 3. maybe a little less distortion, but not too much less. Your strat should be pretty bright already, so give it some mid-range EQ on the amp to get some punch in the right frequencies. As for the distortion, it's very common and easy to set it for "too much" but telling folks to back it off can also produce "too little" see what happens if you lower it just a little bit at a time. If you can lower the gain or drive without losing distortion, that's probably good; you'll bring back some of the dynamics of the notes that way. Also: what exactly is the amp? Is this one of those low-wattage small stack valve amps that won't cut through the rest of the band? -------------------- ::jafomatic
http://jafomatic.net/tunes/ <-- Here lies the master collection of my collaboration and other improvisation recordings. |
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Mar 15 2010, 08:43 AM |
+1 on Jafo here, however I find RAT a very "mid"-oriented pedal mostly suited for leads a'la Robben Ford or such. Since You got a great amp (You know I have the same... ) , I would have go with just a booster or maybe a TS instead. Also, keep the guitar pretty "dry", otherwise it will also muds up with the rest.
//Staffay -------------------- Guitars: Ibanez AM-200, Ibanez GB-10, Fender Stratocaster Classic Player, Warmouth Custom Built, Suhr Classic Strat, Gibson Les Paul Standard 2003, Ibanez steel-string Amps: Fender Hot Rod Deluxe, Marshall JMP 2103, AER 60 Effects: BOSS DD-20, Danelectro Trans. Overdrive, TC-Electronics G-Major, Dunlop Wah-wah, Original SansAmp, BOSS DD-2 Music by Staffy can be found at: Staffay at MySpace |
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Mar 15 2010, 09:07 AM |
Back off the gain. Single coils don't handle high amount of gain well and this is most obvious when you play chords. More mids, less gain - you should be fine.
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Mar 15 2010, 01:35 PM |
1. more mids 2. less bass 3. maybe a little less distortion, but not too much less. Yeah to all above. Mids will cut and after all it's a mids instrument you're playing. Less bass, will besides making the mix better also make you stay better friends with the bass plasyer Too much distortion, it's a misunderstanding that "the more distorion the merrier the song" -------------------- My bands homepage
All time favourites: B. Streisand - Woman in Love, M. Hopkin - Those were the days, L. Richie - Hello |
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Mar 21 2010, 07:26 PM |
Great tips! I agree that the trcik should be in the gain, then again you have to be more secure in your playing
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INSTRUCTOR PROFILE "If a composer could say what he had to say in words he would not bother trying to say it in music." Gustav Mahler Subscribe to my Youtube Channel here |
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Mar 22 2010, 08:13 PM |
Everybody gave great tips on this one, I might note something that seems a bit obvious. When playing these chords, make sure guitar is perfectly in tune, and that the chords are perfectly played. this can often cause big problems as well.
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Mar 24 2010, 08:07 PM |
As everyone stated I think in your case you need to use less gain. Try setting up the tone by playing those chords and changing settings on the amp. You don't want to kill either frequency range (bass, mid, treble). Often players set too much bass and treble and gain and kill mids. Though this may sound ok on its own, when band starts to play you can't cut through the mix well. Mids are very important.
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Mar 25 2010, 07:26 PM |
Gain seems to be a common problem here, many people use way too much gain, which only results ina verry muddy and unprecise sound. Less can definitely be more and even a high gain sound doesn't need 3 distortion pedals in a row.
-------------------- Guitars: various Gibson Les Pauls / Gibson J 45
Amps: Mesa Boogie Tripple Rectifier / Triaxis / 2:90 Poweramp / Rectocabs Effects: Rocktron Intellifex / Rocktron Xpression Homepage: www.marcussiepen.com www.blind-guardian.com Check out my video lessons! |
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