Easiest solution? don't use EQ. seriously. get your ideas down first, then eq them to fit. EQ'ing while writing, beyond simple hi/lo cuts and boosts, is a waste of time. You've got more important things to do while writing.BYTEME wrote:
1. I put a high-shelf on the EQ to only boost everything about 18khz on all drums.
2. I low-shelf the mids and highs on kick-drums and basses, by 2 db or even 4 db.
3. I was once told that I shouldn't boost things in the EQ, only cut everything down around it.
not a bad obsession. Not a particularly amazing one though, either. challenge yourself, write a tune with a really wooly kick sample and go from there.BYTEME wrote: 5. I have an extreme obsession with my kick drums being super short, minimal, almost like a small click, and hit loudly around -6db.
don't use reverb or delay, then, until you can understand and hear them. practice, practice practice. same w/ compression-- if you can't hear it and don't understand it, don't waste time on it. practice compression outside of writing music.BYTEME wrote: 6. I can never use reverb or delay effects properly or even understand how to use them without them sounding so shitty. So I never use them - resulting in a dry track with no pads or any ambiance.
7. I don't know how to side-chain or compress things. So I almost NEVER do that. Resulting in mucky/muddy sounding tracks that could sound so much cleaner and better on the drums.
best bit of reverb advice i've ever heard is from Tony Maserati, an amazing mix engineer. basically, you should be able to "see" the space you're creating with reverb. you should be able to imagine that the sound is in a small room, or in a huge concert hall, or on a mountaintop, or underwater, etc.
if you want drumsounds with reverb, just use samples that already have reverb.
no one needs fancy plugs to write or mix music; in almost any daw, the stock stuff is far more than acceptable these days. I use plenty of fancypants stuff because i know the tools inside and out and i know the effect i'm looking for, and I can get it faster with X tool than Y tool. The chosen tool is as often a stock DAW plug as it isn't.BYTEME wrote:9. I don't have a job now. (I can't afford fancy fucking plugins and shit everyone uses. Like those fancy equalizers and blah blah shit. )
online "community"-- especially message boards--is vastly overrated in terms of "community." W/ that said there's a ton of info on the boards. Gearslutz's Q&A's are an endless source of inspiration, i think i've read and re-read Dave Pensado's one from 2005 at least 1,000 times. Same with Michael Brauer's. However, it's not a community and can't replace real people who give real, honest feedback.BYTEME wrote:10. FL Studio doesn't have much of a community.
11. I think DF is a pretty Ableton and Reason based community full of people who could be nicer. I think I prefer the Trance and Gearslutz forums over this one. IMHO.