I just made a recording today for testing purposes. It's not perfect, but pretty accurate nevertheless
It's a song called "Big Love", I'm playing the live version which can be found on the Fleetwood Mac DVD "The Dance". No vocals included with this recording, but I can sing along with it.
http://www.box.net/public/7j4z7t0fo8 (mp3 file)
Oh. Right, I didn't play with a capo, I lost my capo and thus the song is played in a lower key than it should be.
Nice work! I can tell from your playing that you are skilled and very confident and as a result, that recording had a lot of soul.
You should probably try micing up your amp, it gives the sound much more character. If you plug it straight into the line in it always tends to sound a bit grainy if you get what I mean.
Stuckboy
JC Denton: "I know your UNATCO killphrase: Laputan Machine."
Gunther Hermann: "I - am - not - a - machi --"
JC Denton: "Sticks and stones..."
Thanks
I connected my guitar to the amp and recorded from the amp, but I put the sound on clean (tube preamp), which doesn't give much character to the sound. There's another clean setting which sounds much better, I should've used that one to record this.
Just started recording. No vocals yet but "Jester" is gonna be mad catchy when we finish the recording with proper drum n bass tracks. The only real track in this recording is the guitar... An Epiphone through a Hughes and Kittner amp.
I've dug up this topic to show you my recording of Blackbird by the Beatles that I did on acoustic guitar. Incredibly, this only took one take, when I was expecting three or four. It isn't full or even correct in terms of where the different parts fit in, but I couldn't be bothered with all that.