@guitarsrsoawesome - thanks so much for listening and the kind words. I've loved that melody for a long time and the typical treatment on solo guitar that I hear is more traditional harmonization. I wanted to sort of modernize it while maintaining the emotional impact. Eva Cassidy's vocal version inspired me to try for something new. Look it up on youtube if you haven't heard it. I get chills every time I hear it.
I've read a lot of great things about those sennheisers for mixing. Do you mix with them?
I definitely use them a bit for mixing, but my primary mixing audio source is a pair of entry level Yamaha studio speakers.
I am almost completely self taught at recording and have probably attempted to record about 30-40 songs over about five years. The learning curve has been pretty slow for me, but the quality went up quite a bit when I bought some decent studio monitors and then added these headphones.
I was using bose headphones, but realized when I mixed with them that I would make relatively good mixes (for my ability level) for bose or other high end systems, but on everything else the recordings weren't so hot. So I bought the yamaha's and sennheisers because they were supposedly known for being very flatly eq'd, so in that sense they've helped a lot. I mean, really made a big difference and made the recordings more palatable across a spectrum of devices (car speakers, ear buds, computer speakers, etc.)
One thing I've noticed recording my 514ce (cedar/ES2), using a simple audio technica at2020 condenser mic at about the 12th fret as well a second plugged in channel, is that the recording turned out to be very boomy. The warmth and bass response of the cedar top sounds so beautiful to the ear in the room but seems to overwhelm the low and low mids recording frequencies when recording.
I loved MB's advice about experimenting with the microphone positioning because I would really like to be able to get the natural bass response of our guitar without having to dial so much of it out when eq'ing to get the boom out.
One thing I noticed when seeing Tommy Emmanuel in concert was his sound man's ability to pull out bass guitar like tones from his acoustic, and did so LOUDLY, and yet there was no boom. How the heck did he do that?!?!? If I could just replicate that when I'm playing solo, that's what I would go for. And I would like that on recordings, too. How on earth did they do that?
Recording is definitely a challenge, as MB said, and I love these discussion so I can learn more from you guys and get better and maybe add my little two cents, too.