Seems like this is standard classic recording technique . Most of the classic and modern recording boards have a hi-pass on the pre's and many highend pre's have a high pass on the input . And most engineers use them on all guitars and bass while going in . Who knew ?
“Our virtues and our failings are inseparable, like force and matter. When they separate, man is no more” ― Nikola Tesla
“I cannot be arsed with this right now” ― MISTER NOBODY™
"Stand up for what you believe in even if you are standing alone" ― Sophie Scholl
The discovery of the high pass is but one step on any wanna-be recording engineer's journey.
Having a hardware high pass on my good mic pre is great. It saves a lot of tweaking with multi-band compressors and the like trying to lose the flubby resonance problems I have in my main recording room.
yeah and a comp is going to try and control those sub 50hz sounds you can hardly hear anyway so trimming that off allows your gear to work better . I know this is standard 101 recording engineer school stuff but I didn't go to that school
“Our virtues and our failings are inseparable, like force and matter. When they separate, man is no more” ― Nikola Tesla
“I cannot be arsed with this right now” ― MISTER NOBODY™
"Stand up for what you believe in even if you are standing alone" ― Sophie Scholl
I've found Logic's defaults for hi and low passes and EQs for guitars and bass sound really shit for anything beyond poppy rock. It thins everything out and makes it friendly for heavy, HEAVY compression. YMMV.
Have to say I've never really bothered with High pass filteres while recording - in a live environment they're really useful for getting rid of rumble and low frequency feedback. In the the studio, I'd only really use it on the way in if subsonic information was affecting something downstream like making a compressor grab onto pointless rumble.
In the mix, I'll use it if I have to - often I'll clear up the low end say below 100hz from room mics and overheads just to avoid phase smearing the kick and tom fundamentals - that keeps them nice and fat sounding.
High passing guitar is almost religeon now among internet recording discussions but I'd prefer to avoid it unless it's a particularly rumbly cab. But even then if it's a resonance problem a bell curve at the problem frequency is my preferred option, then maybe a low shelf filter to tame the low end - I like it to be there, even if attenuated, rather than gone.