The #1 Mistake Killing Your Home Metal Recordings
What if I told you that one tiny knob on your amp sim is responsible for 90% of the muddy, amateur-sounding guitar tracks I get from DIY bands?
It’s true, and almost everyone is doing this without realizing it.
I can’t tell you how many sessions I’ve opened where a band sends me DI’s with their “final tone,” only for me to hit play and get blasted with a wall of fizz, mush, and zero definition. They’re tight players, great riffs… but the tone? Completely falling apart.
And here’s the crazy part:
They think they’re making their tone heavier.
But what they’re actually doing is destroying clarity, punch, and mixability before I even get the files.
In this week’s episode, I break down the #1 mistake killing your home metal recordings, and how a simple pro technique can fix it instantly.
The main topics I cover include:
- Why too much gain actually makes your tone smaller
- How high gain kills pick attack and dynamics
- Why double-tracked guitars fall apart when oversaturated
- The pro trick for tight, modern metal rhythm tones
- The exact settings I use on my amp and boost pedal
If you’ve ever wondered why your guitars sound huge in solo but turn to mud the second you double-track them… this episode will change everything.
🎸 FREE GUIDE: Record Guitar & Bass DI's Like a Pro: https://liquidstudiosli.com/guitar-bass-guide
💿 NEED YOUR TRACKS MIXED PROFESSIONALLY?
I apply these exact techniques to every metal mix I do. 🔥 Hire me to mix your next track: https://liquidstudiosli.com/offer-video-2
📥 Free Resources For Metal Bands: https://liquidstudiosli.com/resources
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