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I think for the song the P bass works the best. Warm with just the right amount of thump and bottom to make it's presence known. The J sounds a bit too subdued, IMO, and seems to get a little lost. The Stingray probably cuts the best of the 3 with the best note clarity, but I just think the P is right for the track.
I couldn't say it better. The thing with the Stingray, I always think it sounds awesome but it never seem to fit in any music I play. I just have this thing for rootsy music indeed and it is too powerfull and bright. I agree the P-bass is the best for the track. I knew it would before even comparing but it was fun putting them side by side. The Stingray track is pretty sloppy as I did it late last night.
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Can you clue us in as to what signal chains were to record the tune?
Done in the bedroom or your pro studio?
I think you can tell it is recorded at home. It has not been mastered either. If I owned a fancy preamp such as an Avalon VT737 I probably could make sound closer to a pro studio recording but I am not planning on commercializing my stuff anyway.
The signal chain is Boss GE7 Eq pedal into a DBX 160 xt (with a 4/1 ratio and less than 8db of compression) into computer interface.
The dobro was recorded with an AT4033 mic.