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Too much bass in DI guitar signal

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Submitted by HonzaS on Sat, 10/03/2020 - 02:37

Hello,
so I've just gotten into recording and for some reason my DI guitars are always waaay too bassy with a complete lack of presence. Is there a way to change the DI EQ without always having to do it afterwards?

I'm using a Squier John 5 tele straight into a Focusrite Scarlett 3rd gen solo interface. When I use EQ to get rid of the low end, the guitars start sounding thin and harsh. I've tried a bunch of different amp sims and IRs and even tho they sound great with everything at noon in YouTube videos, they are unusable for me and I have to do some extreme tweeking.

Sorry if I'm missing something obvious and thank you for your replies :-D P.S. I'm using Studio One.

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HonzaS

Thank you guys for your feedback! I have a pair of Presonus eris e3.5 monitors while my room is not "acustically" treated. On them it really sounds bass heavy compared to recordings of other people from YouTube with the same settings. I just can't achieve a good guitar tone and mix in general even after watching and reading countless guides. The monitors tho are amazing and everything sounds great from them.

And yes, on headphones it sounds the same.

Sat, 10/03/2020 - 10:08 Permalink
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miyaru

I found out that recording straight into the audio interface isn't optimal. I have a Focusrite too - a Scarlett 18i20 3rd gen to be precise. Altough stated in the manual that one can connect a guitar straight into the unit, I always usea proper DI. For bass I use a SansAmp Bassdriver and for guitars a Radial. Since not to long, I have a Mooer RADAR - an poweramp and cabsim that goes before the interface, with very satisfying results.

Anyway invest in a good DI box, and your guitar and bassguitar recordings will sound better. This is because the input impedence of the most audio interfaces is not high enough, while dedicated DI boxes have an hight impedence. Stuff like Mooer RADAR go after a preamp or FX unit/stompbox(es) and then it doesn't matter if you use a DI box. But maybe you want to reamp, or have total control over your sound and want a total recall situation - then use a proper DI box!

Tue, 10/06/2020 - 06:25 Permalink