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On Monday, May 6, 2019 at 10:06:17 PM UTC-5, Mike Rivers wrote:
On 5/6/2019 10:14 PM, James Price wrote: The guitar sound will change to a degree to fit in a mix, however I'd contend that ultimately, EQ matching is still a useful tool for getting a guitar tone in the ballpark. The guitar sound is going to start somewhere, so why not start closest to the target tone? That's what the guitar player or the tracking engineer or the producer is supposed to do. If it isn't at least in the ballpark when going into the mix, you're just fooling yourself trying to believe that it's better when the "EQ match" says it is. If it just needs some EQ to get it to fit into the mix better, if you don't do that by hand-and-ear you'll never learn the craft. The main purpose is simply to aid the process of dialing in a specific sound per the guitarists preference. Granted, the sound will change to a degree when you start mixing guitars with other instruments, but that applies to guitars that have been dialed in with or without EQ matching. |
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