Wow..... really good jam.

The lap steel really reminded me of David Lindley and the tone he had on Jackson Brown's Running on Empty album.

Yeah, that jam worked well for me. Nicely done.

EDIT: regarding the panning of guitars. On my speakers, I couldn't really tell much about the panning. The only time panning too far is a problem is if the playback mode is mono and it's not a combination of the 2 channels.

On practically all my songs I tend to put the rhythm guitars 100% right or left, generally with 2 guitars and each recorded uniquely. No cloning. My latest song is a good example of that. Rhythm guitars are close but not exactly the same and they are panned 100% opposite each other. This gives a very wide and full sound to those instruments. You can also do this with say a piano and a guitar playing a rhythm part. It balances the stereo spread or sound stage. I saw something about mixing recently that confirmed what I have been doing. The individual was saying that you shouldn't be afraid to commit to hard panning. I also do the same thing on vocals to thicken them up. Again.... I did this on my last song. The panned vox are considerably lower in the mix than the main vox. Harmonies are around 50% IIRC in that song. I wanted them to blend more rather than stand apart.

Edit the edit:

Sounds good in the cans. Leave it alone and do it again on the next one.

Regarding loud: As long as you don't compress the crap out of it, which it looks like you didn't.... let it roll. I'd rather have a loud mix with dynamics in it any day over something weak sounding. Whatever you did.... it worked.

I caught a brief glimpse of "Jackie Blue" in there towards the end.

Last edited by Guitarhacker; 09/05/22 05:27 AM.

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