OK, I'll show you. Bass is already on 10 and mids only about 5 or so. I'll upload a couple of things, same amp but clean channel and Ibanez SD 9 Sonic Distortion pedal. Same settings, too much treble. Rolled back the highs on amp, mixer and pedal and it sounds pretty good. I kinda like the slide thing anyway, so check these out...Gain Doodles 2 and Slide Raunch. I started to use the Boss SD1 I just got, but I like the SD 9 better. But I got a deal, $20 and it looks like it's brand new, works perfect.
No software editing was done on either, except to remove a few seconds of noise getting ready, mic in the same place about 6" away, same Cort CL 1500 for Gain Doodles 2, mid 40's Electromuse lap steel for Slide Raunch, which combines a Van Wilks slide lick and Rollin and Tumblin as done by Eric Clapton, but with loads of distortion.
These came out sounding good, but I had to roll the treble back to around 4 on the amp (usually 6-7), and about 8 o'clock on the distortion pedal (usually 10 o'clock), 2 on the Tascam. Otherwise it had way too much treble, everything else was fine. Thing is, listening to the amp itself it didn't have that much treble, it was about right. But the recording had too much treble...I've had the same problem with my acoustic, I have to pull the treble back on the mixer and usually use the Audacity software EQ to pull it back even more so it's not just this rig, I seem to be getting too much treble either way.
I'm wondering if the mic is too far away and the bass is fizzling out before it gets there. To mic onstage I put the mic against the grill cloth, here I had it 6" away. Whatever the case, once I pulled the treble back it sounds good. I'm also surprised how good the bass response is for a small solid state practice amp, and at really low volume levels. Most of the time it's giving me the kind of bass I like onstage, kind of like a 10 foot bulldog barking behind me.
Also if you listen close you can hear how the SD9 colors the sound and makes the mids just jump out at times, especially with slide, and at one point early in Gain Doodles 2 I hear feedback...at very low bedroom volume...I couldn't believe it but there it is...around 20 seconds I think. That one was just tinkering around some, whatever popped into my head, it's not intended to be an actual song, just what the name implies, doodling around...But I like some of the sounds I got, especially the overtones during the first 20 seconds, doing the high part.
And this will give you guys a chance to hear me play a little too, at least until I have a chance to try and out together a full song. I have a couple in mind, Rollin and Tumblin is one, and an old Guess Who song, plus an original I wrote about 6 months ago but I haven't tried to figure out what I want for instrumentation or their parts yet. But I am seriously considering working my Wurlitzer electric piano in somewhere. Have to get in touch with a couple of friends here to see if I can get them to do some bass and drums for me, might take some time though due to busy schedules...
Anyway, see what you think, and does this give you any help on how to deal with your rig? I'm wondering if it might work better for you to try just the amp too, instead of running a line signal or through a bigger amp. My RMS seems to be doing a good job by itself, maybe your Vox will too?