I removed the virtual ground Now seems to working ok.But my circuit has a virtual ground on inverting pin.
I'm making a BASS, Treble tone control circuit. & want to fine tune it.
My major problem is, even I tun the BASS knob until 1 o'clock possition it has no any BASS increases.From 1 o'clock onwards it starts making BASS.
Your first circuit correctly had a virtual ground on the + input of the opamp but the - input was at 0V. The opamp is a rectifier.
The second circuit has the + input of the opamp at the minus supply voltage (0V) and the - input was also at 0V
Use the first circuit but add an input coupling capacitor.
As said by Ron, the second circuit would work if you add a negative supply.
Maybe you should do a DC analysis of the circuits showing proper biasing and a good sinewave (or showing severe clipping or a wrong DC output) before looking at the frequency response.
Your 0.0033uF (3.3nF) input capacitor has such a low value that it passes only very high frequencies.
Your simulation schematic is completely different from a good schematic. Your treble tone control is a huge (like a car) variable capacitor.
Your input level might be so high that the opamp is clipping.
Your value of C1 is 200 times too small.
You have C2 and C3 connected wrongly to the slider of the bass tone control instead of only one capacitor across the tone control.
The bass control is at minimum and the treble control is at maximum.
The usual thing to do to show the performance of your circuit is to plot families of curves showing the response of the bass and treble controls separately.