aint mine
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1048803&T =2524
for the love of god
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1049127&T=7109
time 5:47
juice
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1049520&T=9968
time 3:40
juice ORANGE and BLACK version
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1050251&T=4768
3:41
for the love of god HEAVY version
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1049908&T=2987
5:49
juice ORANGE and BLACK version
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1050251&T=4768
3:41
fade to black
http://www.acidplanet.com/artist.asp?PID=1055481&T=3468
time 6:24
Hell yeah man!!!
One piece of advice. Invest in a metronome and use it. Not to be harsh but you have absolutely no sense of timing. You're tracks are too loud. You should put a warning to anyone in case they might blow their speakers. Metal is all about timing. Heck. Music is all about timing. Without meter it's just noise.
Wow - that was LOUD!
I think that really distorted guitar is too out of touch with the rest of the mix. Also, it's not a particularly pleasant sounding distortion - it's something I would use sparingly as an effect. Unfortunately - that guitar was too distracting to make a call about the rest of the track - almost ripped my ears off - I was wearing headphones.
What did you use to get that sound? If you were doing it deliberately, I would suggest using it just as a cameo effect. If not, tell me how you did it, and I may be able to help you improve the sound.
Tommy T
I believe that distortion is the soundcard clipping out. Sounds like distortion box straight into line in.
Hey ridenger, I have to agree with Hue about the timing :wink: Did you use headphones when dubbing in the guitar parts? The reason I ask is if you can't hear the backing track while adding the next part it is hard to get the timing right. Headphones helped me with this. Listen to recordings of your favorite bands. You will tend to listen in a different way after the recording bug has hit you :D BTW I liked the solo at about 2:31 8)