So, would it be a good idea for a single guitar band to use a highpass filter, if there's no bass player?
Live, I've no idea. On a recording, I wouldn't have thought so if there's no bass guitar (depending what else is in the mix).
I'm liking this thread too. Lovely stuff MDV.
I do tend to treat my guitars like monkey8911 suggests - rip the bottom out of them as a matter of course. But I'm not playing metal. I do it mainly to make room for the bass and the keyboards. Recently, I realised it had become a "rule-of-thumb" that I was doing without thinking/listening, so when the bass/keys are coming through how I want, I do investigate whether any guitars could benefit from getting their bottoms back. Our ears are the most useful tools we have... if it sounds good, it is good... if it don't, something needs changing... but you have to listen without prejudice - not always easy, especially when you're knackered and have just spent hours concentrating on one part in the mix.
Overall though, I'm a singer-songwriter, so the band parts I record (no matter how much I like the guitars!), are always "backing" for the lead vocal. I tinker as little as possible with the vocal track itself - I'd be very loathe to strip the bottom end of that. If feels like I need to, I tend to start looking for other instruments that are getting in the vocal's way! :lol:
I do have a little trick I play to get a vocal to cut through without being too loud. I do it with a duplicate of the vocal track though - I rip everything off the duplicate except the highs, then compress the cr@p out of it, NO OTHER EFFECTS, then turn the fader down ready for later. Now on the original, very little EQ (try not to use any - if it sounds naff, then rerecord a better one!), and put as much reverb/etc as you want. Once you've got the rest of the band mixed, bring this vocal up to where you think it ought to be - not too in-your-face, just nice for the band. At the right level, the vocalist (me) probably thinks it's too quiet, but a casual listener (guitarist) thinks it's ok. This is where you bring up the fader on the bright/compressed vocal track - just a little, a slight seasoning... it's an amazing effect. The vocal is quiet enough for the rest of the band, doesn't interfere with all the wondrous arrangement, and it doesn't "jump out" unnaturally. But suddenly you can hear it like you're stood next to the singer. It brings the lead out as a distinct voice from a wall of backing vox, and it seems to be the way I can make a blues/rock vocal sit nice with a rocky guitar mix... (I understand that it was the old motown dudes that came up with this trick to get a heavily reverbed lead vocal through a heavily reverbed band and backing singers).
Can't really help on the scooped guitar sound though (my solution tends to be "why are you doing that? it sounds naff!!! Let me help you adjust your amplifier..." - but that's just my personal taste in guitar sounds and types of music in general :lol:)