Fantastic tutorial. As a worship guitar player, this is how I would like my guitar to sound. I have subscribed immediately after watching this tutorial.
Thank you for this tutorial! You mentioned that you don't want the guitars to "bite", so you wanted to leave the attack setting on the compressor on slow. I usually think that if the attack is slow, then it will let the first transients of the audio pass, and therefore the sound will be more "up-front" and have more of a bite, compared to when you use a fast compressor. Maybe I have thought wrong about this?
You are actually right! Haha. These are my first videos making tutorials like these so i totally screwed up what I was saying. But yes your way of thinking is correct. facepalm on my part. Good catch!
I like to record guitars in Stereo but if that is not an options I will double track the guitars. I pretty much always add reverb unless the tracked guitars already have enough of them.
I have a reverb set up on my session to add a verb to all of the instruments that are direct to try to do a 'put them all in the same room' type of feel if they feel off. The output of that fader was turned off for this tutorial.
►► Get the 5 part framework to professional live recoordings → www.produceperform.com/the-5-part-framework-to-professional-worship-recordings\
Fantastic tutorial. As a worship guitar player, this is how I would like my guitar to sound. I have subscribed immediately after watching this tutorial.
Thank you! I really appreciate it.
this is cool man, finally a channel that we church musician should hangout~
how about keyboard and synths? will wait for more!
thank you! I've been looking for something like this for a while and decided i should just do it!
I will for sure hit keyboard and synths soon.
Another great video! Keep up the quality tutorials!! 🙌🏼
Thank you brother!!
Wow thank you bro. God bless . High quality tutorials to support ministries across the globe
Thank you so much for your kind words! It means so much.
Super Helpful! Thank You for this! More videos please.
Planning to release a video a week! Thank you so much for watching.
Love this channel! Keep making more videos!
Thank you so much! I won't be stopping anytime soon.
God bless you bro.
Keep sharing wonderful content.
You are amazing
Thank you so much!🙌 I won't be stopping anytime soon.
Nice!! t, I was looking for worship production related content. Keep going ..God Bless you.
Thank you!! I plan to keep going for sure.
Thank you for this! Super helpful! Can you make a video on mixing drums? Your drum mix sounds huge!!
Thank you!! Probably the biggest compliment you could give 😂. Drum videos should be coming in november!
@@produceperform will surely be watching it when it comes out!
Great tips man. God bless you
Thank you for watching!
this is beautiful...how do i get to listen to the complete song..the drums sounds amazing
This song is not out yet! I'll try to remember to let you know when it is!
Thank you for this tutorial! You mentioned that you don't want the guitars to "bite", so you wanted to leave the attack setting on the compressor on slow. I usually think that if the attack is slow, then it will let the first transients of the audio pass, and therefore the sound will be more "up-front" and have more of a bite, compared to when you use a fast compressor. Maybe I have thought wrong about this?
You are actually right! Haha. These are my first videos making tutorials like these so i totally screwed up what I was saying. But yes your way of thinking is correct. facepalm on my part. Good catch!
@@produceperformNo problem:) Thank you for answering, and for this video
thank you so much pls can you do drums next pls
Thank you for watching! Drum videos should be coming in november!
Do you double track the guitars and use reverb on both L+R, or just use a stereo reverb on a single tracked guitar?
I like to record guitars in Stereo but if that is not an options I will double track the guitars. I pretty much always add reverb unless the tracked guitars already have enough of them.
What is that verb in the send for?
I have a reverb set up on my session to add a verb to all of the instruments that are direct to try to do a 'put them all in the same room' type of feel if they feel off. The output of that fader was turned off for this tutorial.