A few weeks into the lockdown I got a call from a reggae band I have worked with in the past to drop some bass on a couple of tracks they were working on.
Anyway a couple of weeks afterwards I got the first of the two tracks which was just drums and guide keyboards. I decided to use my Series I bass as it has the neck pickup closest to the truss rod cavity so is quite a bit heavy on the bottom end.
I had a chat with one of the producers about what kind of tone they wanted and he said both said just leave the controls fully open and we will sort out what we want from that.
I recorded a few basslines with the filters about a third of the way open, because I know how bright a series bass can be, so I could get clarity and heft and sent them the one I thought fitted the track.
Before that I also non-destructively Eq'd the track taking most of the top end out so I had some punch and deep low end and thought, yeah they should be able to work with that and took out all the eq and sent the track.
About a month later they sent me an early mix that had vocals, guitar and brass down on it and the guys from the band said they were really happy with everything.
Then this weekend I got a call from the band leader to tell me that the producer(s) could not get the sound they wanted from the bass track as it had too much top end on it and could I re-record it with less top end.
I'm happy to do it but I want to get it right this time tonally so that they have less work to do on it.
The naughty side of me wants to record via my SF-2 and send off some unearthly hefty bottom end and punch in the track :-) but that might be counter productive the other way.
I think this time round it may be better to try a simpler approach with my standard Europa and switch in the bass boost switch rolling the filter back so that I get the meat and punch but less of the mids.
I'm really looking for advice on what is a good way to record the bass how much to roll off the filter so that they get what they want without taking too much out losing flexibility when mixing.I would welcome some advice from some seasoned studio players and or producers or anyone really well versed in studio/home studio recordings.
In them meantime I will try to get hold of one of the producers this evening and get a better idea, maybe suggest recording it in their studio.