on the final mix of song before you send to get mastered, how much energy (volume/thickness) do you want in the bass frequencies?
let me know if I need to make this question more specific...
thanks!
To elaborate on Mr. Fossenkemper's answer: think about the mix you are doing. A death metal mix will want a bass guitar that has mostly subs and lows -- that mushy earthquake tone. A jazz record will want more of that upright bass sound, so it's goodbye midrange. Of course, if you screwed this up and already finished the mix, well, it's time to retrack the bass correctly. 8) The other thing I would warn against is boosting or cutting the same frequencies on the bass and bass drum. But other than that I don't have anything else to say. :D
Removing the same frequencies from all your lower instruments, and even from vocals too, would indicate to me that you have a problem with your monitoring chain/room.
Lots of people rely 90 percent on there ear but tweak it by ear then reference what you got with a RTA. That's if you have a not so acoustically correct room.
frnk wrote: Lots of people rely 90 percent on there ear but tweak it by ear then reference what you got with a RTA. That's if you have a not so acoustically correct room.
An RTA will tell you very little to nothing about how bass translates in a real environment. Ears with accurate speakers in an accurate room are the one and only answer.
Comments
whatever sounds right.
whatever sounds right.
So many people, over and over and over again for years and years
The most basic concept in all of recording still seems the most elusive. :lol:
If you're making a hip hop song, do you think it'll have more or
If you're making a hip hop song, do you think it'll have more or less bass energy than an acoustic recording of a violin and a harp?
I can just imagine the harp with the bass boosted to match "mastering levels" ...
Push the Dolby C button on the tape deck, right? ;-)
Push the Dolby C button on the tape deck, right?
;-)
on the final mix of song before you send to get mastered, how mu
To elaborate on Mr. Fossenkemper's answer: think about the mix you are doing. A death metal mix will want a bass guitar that has mostly subs and lows -- that mushy earthquake tone. A jazz record will want more of that upright bass sound, so it's goodbye midrange. Of course, if you screwed this up and already finished the mix, well, it's time to retrack the bass correctly. 8) The other thing I would warn against is boosting or cutting the same frequencies on the bass and bass drum. But other than that I don't have anything else to say. :D
Removing the same frequencies from all your lower instruments, a
Removing the same frequencies from all your lower instruments, and even from vocals too, would indicate to me that you have a problem with your monitoring chain/room.
low end Lots of people rely 90 percent on there ear but tweak i
low end
Lots of people rely 90 percent on there ear but tweak it by ear then reference what you got with a RTA. That's if you have a not so acoustically correct room.
oops
oops
Re: low end frnk wrote: Lots of people rely 90 percent on there
Re: low end
An RTA will tell you very little to nothing about how bass translates in a real environment. Ears with accurate speakers in an accurate room are the one and only answer.