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Is this all in EQ? For example, the open Low E, as well as many other notes are dwarfed in comparison to the 4th and 5th frets on the Low E. These ones rock the subwoofer and then makes the other notes seem puny. Is there any remedy for this? Thanks.

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anonymous Mon, 08/03/2009 - 10:48

Quite a few things to check.

The first thing i would advise would be to listen to your track, with all bass
EQ and Compression bypassed on a few other systems.

Is the bass still booming those particular notes?

It may be that your room has a peaking node that makes those particular notes sound loud.

If you have made certain it is the recording there are a few things that can be done.

Try a surgical EQ in conjunction with a spectrum analysis plugin to balance just the offending frequencies.

Bass can also take quite drastic compression. Spank it 12db or so with an 1176.

Hope this helps

:) :) :) :o :o :o :roll: :o :o :o :D :D :D

hueseph Mon, 08/03/2009 - 12:55

Is this electric guitar or acoustic? If it's acoustic, move the mic.

If it's electric and you're micing a cab, move the mic. If it's still an issue, try and isolate the cab and move the mic.

Always start at the source then move on from there. If it sounds like crap to begin with, eq and compression can only do so much.

apstrong Mon, 08/03/2009 - 16:21

Here it is on a piano:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_key_frequencies

Here's an interactive one:

http://www.independentrecording.net/irn/resources/freqchart/main_display.htm

And there's this:

http://www.har-bal.com/images/stories/frequency_chart_lg.gif

Here's software to do it if you're lazy:

http://lost-memories.com/softs/

Found all this while looking for the classic Carnegie chart, which appears only available on Katz' website for purchase. So it goes.

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