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So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Fri Aug 03, 2012 8:04 am
by GreatAnt
I'm still testing myself to see if I can distinguish different guitar tones and was wondering if I could get a few of your ideas of what a dry, saturated etc tone sounds like?
To me a dry sounding tone is one that sounds really raw, snappy, articulate, not a lot of distortion.
Where as a saturated is something that is more smooth sounding.
For example (dirty tone only)
ISIS - Oceanic - The guitars on that album to me sound like they are dry?
Meshuggah - Bleed - The guitars sound really saturated?
Can you give me your definitions of a dry and saturated tone (and others?) and bands and songs that you can give as an example?
Cheers
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Fri Aug 03, 2012 9:19 am
by Chankgeez
(As usual, not sure I understand the question.)
Too subjective to even attempt. What's dry to somebody is saturated to somebody else, and vice versa.
Plus, I'm not sure I wanna confine myself to semantics like that.
There're some things I don't mind nitpicking. This isn't one of 'em.
Why, exactly, GreatAnt, is this of importance for you to define?
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 9:32 am
by GardenoftheDead
Given your examples and your definition, you have it backwards. Isis used fucking mountains of gain, Meshuggah use much less than you think. Isis also tends to have a looser low end so I wouldn't call it articulate. At least not on Oceanic.
To me, dry means "no reverb/delay/echo" and saturated means,"super fuzzy/distorted and trebly."
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 11:26 am
by D.o.S.
Panopticon is a very dry sounding album.
Busse Woods is saturated beyond belief.
Excuse me while I douse my head in napalm for getting involved in this conversation.
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 11:30 am
by Chankgeez
Is there a difference between the definitions of a dry/saturated guitar sound and a dry/saturated overall mix?
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 11:36 am
by D.o.S.
Probably.
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 12:30 pm
by Mudfuzz
When I think of a "dry" sound my mind goes to old Blues/Rock'N'Roll/R&B/Soul recordings. This doesn't have to be clean though, take Link Ray, his sound is distorted as hell but it always has this dryness to it. John Lee Hooker as well.
Saturated to me has to be more then just reverb... more then fuzz... more then distortion... like Hendrix, like MBV, like Boris. I big sounding bigness

Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sun Aug 05, 2012 6:18 am
by theavondon
To me (who the fuck am I though?), Houdini by The Melvins always sounded really dry to me. Part Chimp sounds super saturated.
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Sun Aug 05, 2012 2:06 pm
by DarkAxel
to react to the first post, i have it the other way around... Isis - always saturated, Meshuggah - DRY
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 7:51 am
by nieh
Velvet Underground has the driest guitar tone ever.
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 3:39 pm
by Derelict78
^
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 2:44 am
by IEatCats
GardenoftheDead wrote:To me, dry means "no reverb/delay/echo" and saturated means,"super fuzzy/distorted and trebly."
Dry/Wet refer to reverb/delay/echo/flange/chorus to me and Saturation refers to gain/distortion/fuzz.

Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Wed Aug 08, 2012 1:24 am
by metalmariachi
To me jazz sounds dry,
Old blues, cranked tweed, lots of sag and natural compression is saturated
MM
Re: So what's a dry and saturated tone to you?
Posted: Wed Aug 08, 2012 1:38 am
by kosta
I'll go Wire for dry, and earlier Black Keys for saturated.