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uncle_jerr
Moderator

Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 410
Location: Illinois |
dull guitar sound
How are you recording the guitar?
Are you plugging the guitar straight into the computer?
If so, you'll need a DI box (direct inject). The humming comes from the mismatched impedence levels of the guitar and the recording input.
Otherwise, it could be the wiring of the guitar. I have had to re-wire my guitars because of improper grounding. check out http://www.guitarnuts.com to help with that.
If you're miking an amp, try multiple microphones and different placements and check out the instrument miking threads here.
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Thu Jul 28, 2005 12:06 am |
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05steve
Wannabe

Joined: Jun 07, 2005
Posts: 11
Location: Toronto |
| Quote: |
I'm recording the guitar through a a\d converter as all the other instriments.
I've used my output from my keyboard to record drum and synth tracks
I also get a low level hum with that mind you I'm using the same 2 patch cords. I've heard single coil pickups can cause this but all of my guitars and the keyboard output (other than midi) still hum.
I think I'll have the a/d converter tested first and then go from there I'll keep posting info untill resolved.
Not miking the guitar...I tend to breathe heavy on leads:) Direct input of the guitar as I mentioned through the a/d converter Tascam us122..the guitar is a yamaha classical with 2 pickups one in the bridge and a boom mike in the base of the box. I'll check the link on re-wire guitars.
I do have several decent mikes...A C1 that I could try...but again..background noise from me might be an issue...thanks |
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Thu Jul 28, 2005 8:52 pm |
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uncle_jerr
Moderator

Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 410
Location: Illinois |
source of hum
ok, if you're using the guitar inputs on the tascam, that eliminates the need for the DI box I mentioned. And since the keyboard hums as much as the guitar, it's probably not the guitar wiring, so that just leaves the cables and the Tascam to be the source of the problem. You could still use a DI box to convert the instrument/line level signal from your guitar and keys into a mic signal. You said your mic inputs worked fine right? You can find DIs that retail around $25-30 online. Good luck
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Fri Jul 29, 2005 7:58 am |
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gary133
Wannabe

Joined: May 20, 2006
Posts: 1
Location: Toronto, Canada |
Something that I've been trying out lately with guitar trracks is to copy the recorded track to a second track then pan one most of the way left and one most of the way right. Then shift one of them a few ticks ahead. Gives a fuller sound that seems to jump out of the mix a little more.
I'm assuming here that you're using a multi-track sequencing program of some kind.
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Sun May 21, 2006 12:04 am |
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uncle_jerr
Moderator

Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 410
Location: Illinois |
actually, that will cause phasing.
Try duplicating, panning, then using diferent EQ on each track differently. or different short reverbs. or any effect for that matter.
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Mon May 22, 2006 6:18 am |
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