Thanks Paul. The Marshall mics were 2001XP (right) and a 603S (left). $155 from Musician's Friend. I can't afford any really good ones but these aren't bad. I would normally mic the guitar but my mother-in-law is living with me now (home health care) so I can't bring in the amp and go to town. The bass is a Jerry Jones. It's the funkiest looking thing I've ever seen It's got a pair of lipstick tube pickups and a 32" scale but it sounds good. There's a picture of it on my site http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/fuzzy.html Jan On Tue, 2003-02-25 at 12:00, Paul Winkler wrote: > On Tue, Feb 25, 2003 at 11:49:12PM +0700, Darren Landrum wrote: > > I would like to reiterate how much I like the sound you got form the > > drums. It sounds so natural, and quite perfect for the type of music > > you're doing. > > Indeed, looks like Jan has discovered the "less-is-more" school > of drum miking, which IMHO is often the way to go - don't put 10 mics > on a drum kit unless you REALLY know what to do with 'em! > > BTW, which cheap Marshall mics were those? is that the 600 or > the 603 or what? I need some more mics and I've had my eye > on those guys ... > > > > Digitech RP-100 for the guitar. > > that was my only real complaint with the track I downloaded - > not a "natural" electric guitar sound at all. > Now I know why. :) Of course this is a matter of taste - I just > don't like "direct" guitar sound for most kinds of music. > > Good bass sound - I don't usually like direct bass either, > but it's not obtrusive here, and it sits nicely in the mix. > > Overall the mix is nicely balanced and pleasing. > Good job! > > -- > > Paul Winkler > http://www.slinkp.com >