Audio preamplifier with tone control

Hello! So i have this preamp circuit but the problem is I need a bigger gain. What should i change/add?
 

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The tone stage has unity gain with the tone controls centered. The input stage has unity gain.
To have more than unity voltage gain overall, you need a gain stage at the input, before the follower stage.

Add a gain stage similar to Q2 at the input. However, x100 gain would be difficult to achieve in one bipolar stage.
You may have to use two cascaded x10 gain stages, before the follower stage.
 
The tone stage has unity gain with the tone controls centered. The input stage has unity gain.
To have more than unity voltage gain overall, you need a gain stage at the input, before the follower stage.

Add a gain stage similar to Q2 at the input. However, x100 gain would be difficult to achieve in one bipolar stage.
You may have to use two cascaded x10 gain stages, before the follower stage.
I will try that, thank you so much I really appreciate it. Can I message you/reply here later today or tomorrow if I still can't figure it out?
 
Just post here. Has this project ever been assigned before? It is not trivial with discrete components.
The active tone stage must have unity gain.

Just two standard op amps would be adequate otherwise.
No it hasn't, usually they assign an amplifier, oscillator or a stabilizer, so this preamp is something completely new. No documentation or examples other than the requirements I lister earlier
 
This is an old circuit similar to the Sinclair project 60 preamp, except that the Sinclair circuit used two transistors instead of the input follower, and they switched RIAA feedback in and out for phono/Mic/aux inputs. There are issues with these old circuits, but they worked well enough, and the Sinclair preamp is similar to what you have.
http://diy.torrens.org/Sinclair/P60/issue_1/p06.jpg
If you are building something new, I would copy the tone controls but use op-amps instead of discrete amplifier. Setting the gain of an op-amp is a simple matter of selecting the feedback resistors. You could build this entire preamp (two channels) with a single quad op-amp.
 
This is an old circuit similar to the Sinclair project 60 preamp, except that the Sinclair circuit used two transistors instead of the input follower, and they switched RIAA feedback in and out for phono/Mic/aux inputs. There are issues with these old circuits, but they worked well enough, and the Sinclair preamp is similar to what you have.
http://diy.torrens.org/Sinclair/P60/issue_1/p06.jpg
If you are building something new, I would copy the tone controls but use op-amps instead of discrete amplifier. Setting the gain of an op-amp is a simple matter of selecting the feedback resistors. You could build this entire preamp (two channels) with a single quad op-amp.
Thank you! Unfortunately it's a uni project and I can't use op-amps