jw123 wrote:George you guys might think about a vocal harmonizer to fill up the vocals, of course my old trick is still to put 10-20ms of digital delay on it to thicken it up.
On your guitar parts, I think something that would help is for you to maybe play little partial chords on some verses instead of all thick chords.
Im not musical enough to explain, but I will try.
Say you are playing a A major chord on all six strings at the 5th fret, for a couple of lines of verses you might just play the G,B and E string part of the chords, this will give it a little more dynamic, and then when you hit the important parts go ahead and use all the strings.
I do this on a lot of things live, just mixes it up for me, and makes a change in the tone of the song, to hopefully draw a listeners ears in.
You have the makings of a great song so dont give up exploring some chord inversions every now and then, like I was just talking about.
I know exactly what your getting at JW.
And it's good input.
This song actually has changed quite a bit from it's inception where in the original version the second guitarist was playing the whole rhythm with me doing the heavy distortion on the chorus only.
We only recently switched to my playing the entire rhythm, and to be quite honest I'm still not very comfortable with it.
Often I do use a lot of sharp palm stop and staccato strumming but I still have some difficulty keeping it together with the vocal flow.
( some of the original lyric have been changed as well which complicates things on a song I've been doing the same way for six years )
We have a harmonizer, but really have never been pleased with the sound.
We also use a lot of effects on JAX vox live ( delay & reverb ). This was recorded pretty much dry all over to allow more leverage in the mix / master phase that is being done by a "second party" we trust.