What sort of advice is that?narcossist wrote:
panning is useful
Panning is absolutely essential
Because the cheaper EQs cause phase distortion when boosted rather than cut. Sometimes this sounds cool, but a lot of time it sounds ass and men with beards will point at you and snark.psyphon wrote:Erm, why?TeReKeTe wrote: when eq-ing, cut rather than boost
If something sounds muddy or needs more presence in a mix then boost frequencies that will give it more presence.
Yes but boosting will separate frequencies also.Kato! wrote: if you cut some of the frequencies from the bass that are are also present in the kik, the kik will have more space to breathe and will sound punchier
I always thought 30hz was a bit high, worrying about missing out on the 20-30 range and making it sound a bit less solid on a big system, but couldn't really tell, as my neighbours wouldn't appreciate the addition of a subwoofer; any other opinions on frequency of the hpf?Kato! wrote: Small to mid size studio monitors tend to reproduce bass down to 50 or 40hz, so even if your not hearing it, chances are you may have alot of sub you really don't need eating up your headroom, so you can simple use a hpf with a steep cut off set to 30hz. It's also a good idea to use a hpf (high pass filter) on any elements of the mix that are not the bass such as vocals or synth stabs, set the cut off to around 150hz, you will notice a massive difference in how loud you can push your mixes then without distorting the o/p.
www.myspace.com/katomyspace
well its quite easy.. Every sample takes some frequnties and if you just only boost something the frequenties will still layer eachother... if you cut it itll make space for eachother. Your mix will be more transparant and will sound much more clear.psyphon wrote:Yes but boosting will separate frequencies also.Kato! wrote: if you cut some of the frequencies from the bass that are are also present in the kik, the kik will have more space to breathe and will sound punchier
I agree some of the cheaper EQ's are crap, but saying cut rather than boost is a bit misleading to those that'll read this and then they'll do it as read...
I understand the fundamentals of frequencies and harmonics as I studied audio engineering for a long time.R wrote:well its quite easy.. Every sample takes some frequnties and if you just only boost something the frequenties will still layer eachother... if you cut it itll make space for eachother. Your mix will be more transparant and will sound much more clear.psyphon wrote:Yes but boosting will separate frequencies also.Kato! wrote: if you cut some of the frequencies from the bass that are are also present in the kik, the kik will have more space to breathe and will sound punchier
I agree some of the cheaper EQ's are crap, but saying cut rather than boost is a bit misleading to those that'll read this and then they'll do it as read...
a random tip :
Eq cut = boost volume
Eq Boost = lower volume
this is for getting a good balance.
if you cut you can put the volume louder cause some frequnties dont layer eachother anymore !![]()
if you boost you have to lower the volume otherwise itll struggle even more then before.
Thats all my studio production teacher ever told us!!!Konehed wrote:you cant polish a turd
30hz is not high! As I have said previously most sound systems struggle to reproduce frequencies that low. You will also struggle to hear 30hz, you will feel it. If you want your bass solid use compression.Argonaut wrote:I always thought 30hz was a bit high, worrying about missing out on the 20-30 range and making it sound a bit less solid on a big system, but couldn't really tell, as my neighbours wouldn't appreciate the addition of a subwoofer; any other opinions on frequency of the hpf?Kato! wrote: Small to mid size studio monitors tend to reproduce bass down to 50 or 40hz, so even if your not hearing it, chances are you may have alot of sub you really don't need eating up your headroom, so you can simple use a hpf with a steep cut off set to 30hz. It's also a good idea to use a hpf (high pass filter) on any elements of the mix that are not the bass such as vocals or synth stabs, set the cut off to around 150hz, you will notice a massive difference in how loud you can push your mixes then without distorting the o/p.
www.myspace.com/katomyspace
not really coz you can cut the unwanted ones then just turn the sample in question UP to give it more presence or clone the channel etcpsyphon wrote:Yes but boosting will separate frequencies also.Kato! wrote: if you cut some of the frequencies from the bass that are are also present in the kik, the kik will have more space to breathe and will sound punchier
I agree some of the cheaper EQ's are crap, but saying cut rather than boost is a bit misleading to those that'll read this and then they'll do it as read...
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