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I have my microphone going into my mixer, and then into Pro Tools. How should I set my EQs on the mixer for the vocals coming into Pro Tools? Is it a good idea to set everything to zero, and then eq it in Pro Tools?

Comments

stickers Fri, 11/18/2005 - 09:55

It depends. You may not need to EQ at all going into protools. You may want to roll off under 80-100hz. But then again, if you EQ to tape there's no going back. If you dont EQ going to tape you can always EQ later ITB.

USE YOUR EARS. There isnt a set of rules for recording any particular sound source.

anonymous Fri, 11/18/2005 - 12:50

i wouldnt eq going into protools, all the eging you will need is aviable there. plus so may end up with a sibliance problem if you bup up the wrong frequnecies and if you cut them you might find that you wish you didint. i would take the advice about low pass high pass and then use the eq very sparingly afterwrds. i personally have never used too much eq on vocasl. i good mic and a good pre and you shouldnt have to do too much
hope it helps
steve

anonymous Sat, 11/19/2005 - 03:12

the max i do is rolling off some low end if i have some "rumble", which you actually shouldn't have in the first place. only if there is really no other way with mic placement or mic choice to avoid it.

and then EQ all the rest after recording. what you cut out before you never get back, and changing / manipulating afterwards is easy...

Davedog Sat, 11/19/2005 - 11:50

Flat.

Always.

If it doesnt sound right, then move the mic, move the singer, off axis, goboe the area, use the pad/roll-off on the mic(if any)....
In short do not use any of the mixers controls for anything other than monitoring.............unless you are recording through a Neve/API/MCI/other premium console....then do what ever sounds great.

All of the above suggestions are still the FIRST thing to do no matter what you record through.

There is NO MAGIC SETTING. Recording is capturing a Performance in an Environment at a specific Time.

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