![]() ![]() Room is treated and utilize room correction software. From my understanding he’s going straight into a tascam interface (on instrument already checked). Unfortunately I’m only mixing these most recent DI tracks. I think this is why it's not unusual to see something wrapped behind the nut for damping on high gain guitar setups - hair bands or cordage or whatever. If this is present, high gain will emphasise it. But it would be very dependent on the specific trem setup, springs, tension etc so it could go more wrong I'm sure. Tends to be more like a subtle reverb effect. A fret wrap behind the nut sorted that out.įloating trem springs can do it too. It turned out to be strings resonating behind the nut. I had a guitar that put resonances around those frequencies into the mix. FABFILTER TIMELESS 3 GEARSPACE HOW TOIf you have identified them seems strange that you would go from "these frequencies are bad" to "I have destroyed the tone".If slowly pulling out the frequency doesn't smooth out the build up until the tone is destroyed then maybe you aren't working on the right frequencies.Īre you sure this isn't an issue with you listening environment? Obviously I don't know what your room is like, so just a thought.Īre you having this same issue with different guitars? Have you tried different guitars?Īre you going direct into an interface? Or are you actually using a DI Box? If you are going directly into the interface's DI input.maybe try with an actual DI box.get a good quality one or rent/borrow one.Īs far as how to work with what you have already recorded that you say you can't reamp.You might get more useful feedback/advice is you upload some examples. If this is just a buildup of frequencies.then I would say EQ is the way to fix it. When you play the guitar from the DI with no amp sims.is there any trace of these bad frequencies there? ![]() It's hard to say how to fix this without knowing where it is coming from. Thanks!You should post some audio examples. Mainly using fabfilter eq and smoothe helps on occasion but not as much as I would have hoped.Īny magic trick to remove these nasty artifacts without killing my guitar sound? Music is mainly hi gain guitar punk rock, loud, fast, and heavy.Īny tricks to cure it after the fact? And tips to stop it from happening in the first place (I’m a drummer not a guitarist so any insight here is helpful)? I use eq and notch these gremlins out, super tight q with 3-6db of reduction when I can, but most of the time they largely remain unless I use some nuclear eq cuts which kills the whole guitar sound. Unfortunately for me, most of the things I’m mixing currently are coming in DI form and I have to use amp sims, reamping isn’t a possibility at this point with these tracks. Recording real amps it happens much less frequently, and is usually easier to notch out a bit on eq so it mostly disappears in the mix. ![]() I mainly find this issue using amp sims (using mainly neural DSP stuff but happens it pretty much anything). They sometime sound like a whistle or sometimes percussive like a high pitched cow bell (cue more cowbell jokes now). One thing that I’ve been battling lately are some nasty electric guitar resonant frequencies in the 2-3.5khz range. Hello, not a beginner here but far from a pro. ![]()
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