First thing first, before I get into what I learned today. I double track my guitars, two different amps, two different cabs, two different mics, two different pedal chains, and I hard pan them left and right. They generally end up sounding really big.
The lesson I learned today, though, is this one… If you want your guitars to sound even bigger, turn down the vocal. What?
I was setting up for my live stream today, as I do most of the time, but I’ve been thinking that my vocal was a little loud for a while. So I stuck a vca fader on it (it’s heavily automated), and dropped it down 3db. Checked it, seemed fine.
During the stream, I asked another recording friend what he thought about how it sounded, and he said, “the guitars sound bigger.”
Woah…
I think two things happen - one - my vocal and much of my guitar take up a lot of the same frequency range, so if I drop the vocal some, there’s obviously more room for the guitar, but I think it also probably had some effect on how the limiter on the master buss affected the material.
Anyway, my vocal is where I want it (I think, for this week, at least), and the guitars apparently sound bigger, which, for what I do, is music to my ears.
PS…
If you want to hear the difference for yourself…
From two days ago…
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/635123185
From today (after the change) (click ahead about 9 minutes 40 seconds to hear the same song as the first song in the other vid)
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/636710002