Bubba wrote: ↑Wed May 27, 2020 6:20 am
Hi Armi
It's mostly sounding really good but I still have a couple of niggles. Firstly I'll say that the bass sounds spot on, to me.
Listening on headphones, the two sides of the mix aren't balanced, to me - there definitely sounds to be more going on in the right ear than on the left. This is still most noticeable in the verses. The guitar in the right ear is
apparently a good bit louder than the one on the left. I've put "apparently" in italics, because I've come across this phenomenon before.
I know from our chat conversations that you have the two guitars showing exactly the same volume on the meters. You also told me that they are both recorded using a stereo FX pedal. Now, when I recorded my Roland JC120 Jazz Chorus amp, using two microphones to capture the stereo chorus effect, I had both channels at exactly the same volume on the meters and panned left and right to maximise the spread. To my surprise, the guitar
apparently leaned strongly to the side of the un-effected channel. I recorded an identical second dose of the guitar and switched L&R channels. This time the guitar leaned strongly in the opposite direction and this is how I ended up mixing the track to get a balanced mix.
The long and the short of it is, I think something similar is going on here. The mix sounds a little empty on the left, particularly when the guitar break comes in and it's also panned over to the right! I don't know what to suggest other than to evaluate the mix balance critically on headphones and adjust the two rhythm guitars to a point where they sound balanced, despite what the meters say. Maybe switch your left and right channels on the other stereo guitar track as I did?
Thanks for your continued attention Bubs...
I've always been happy with the bass sound, personally - it's a preference thing. The worst bass player in the world as far as I'm concerned is/was Chris Squire (only just realised he was dead...

) from Yes who of course was recognised as a great bass player but I just can't stand that overly featured, trebly bass sound he uses. Which is why I was never a Yes fan.

Bass should be heard but not seen, IMO...

Glad you agree with me!
I can hear the imbalance of which you speak after doing a bit of soloing and getting the cans on it, but it was a long way from bothering me - it has to do with the fundamentally different nature of the two sounds - one is cleaner, the other middier and grittier, and that although they're playing the same thing, one side has an echo and the other a delay, which sounds nitpicky but makes a difference - so in the mix below I've just pulled it back a little in the verses and rebalanced in the choruses - so hopefully this will sort it out - the grittier delayed sound is the R and it's poking through more. Thanks for hounding me on that one...
All 3 solo guitars - intro, middle, outro - are panned dead centre and always have been - they're absolutely not panned to the right. They have a plug in dual delay added which, if anything would push left - but it's barely noticeable. So I can't hear that, and so I can't actually fix it...
TAKE BLOODY FIVE...
I'm exhausted....
