To everyone doubting this is the real guitar track, to my ear as a sound producer it sounds exactly what I expect an isolated guitar track to sound like. To the layperson, they sound thinner and smaller than expected because they don’t really understand where the guitar ends and the bass begins. The secret to a huge guitar sound is a huge bass sound. That’s what’s supplying the low end. If you tried to use a guitar sound like how a bedroom player dials it in their bedroom, there would scarcely be enough room in the low end for the bass and kick drum. When your ear gets used to it, it doesn’t sound thin when you know how it’s supposed to function in a mix. It lives in the midrange, being a mid range instrument and all with just a touch of cabinet thumb. There are many ways to get it done with automated or reactive eq with multiband ducking and so on but this is generally how it’s done and I don’t hear a thing wrong with it. Sounds nice, clear and heavy to me. Not death metal heavy but enough so for hard rock music.
I learned about the bass guitar covering the low end through Pantera. The guitar had a chainsaw tone but the bass played right on top of the guitar and created sheer heaviness. Combine that with the drums and you had this wall of sound that was a force to be reckoned with. A great example would be their song "A New Level". Simple, but effective.
this IS the master... this is what Tom recorded as his guitar part in the studio and this is how it would have sounded before mixing and mastering of the final track what you hear in the full song is a heavily reworked combination of the vocal/guitar/bass/drum master tracks.
No. Its pretty easy to tell that this has already been mixed and even mastered. Lots of reverb, some delays, bottom end taken out, lots of compression, limiting...etc, etc,Its already processed.
@@SebastianJeri If you were to remove the bass drums lyrics and synths off this song, for example, the Enema of the state or the CD single version, I honestly know this is what you're left with.
@@SebastianJeri it's the stereo guitar stem, which have been mixed but definitely not mastered - mastering is done to the stereo MASTER bus hence the term mastering.
@IAVAIN I'm not sure if this is the final track that's on the album, but i think so. I remember I downloaded it years ago. It's probably from Guitar hero or something like that.
+PCGamingCommentaries Even though electronics a big factor, there is more to electric guitar sound production. What you do with your hands is also a factor. There is some palm muting and non-palm muting (and palm muting can have varying degrees -- not just on and off) and it sounds like most of it is down-picked. Regarding the electronics...it sounds to me like it is not a distortion box so much as just the amplifier's high-gain sound, and maybe some compression to get the clicky sound.
And how to do this sound, with amp simulator program on pc? I worked a lot to get sound like tom stratocaster guitar, but mine is just like this not exactly this.
Mesa Boogie Dual Rectifier + Marshall JCM900. Try those models in your amp sim. You'll also need a humbucker equipped strat, single coils won't sound like this.
You’d be surprised what happens when the bass is taken out of the mix… anything taken out of the mix really… Things aren’t going to sound like you think they will, out of context.
Yeah this sounds like garbage . If this is what it takes to get a professional sound just record on your phone. I’m not sure how people got these tracks from rock band or whoever but they sound super phasy and empty . Often you hear the other tracks in the background too , so somewhere down the like they might have used some software to try and isolate tracks but I highly doubt it’s origin is a true clean master