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Im in the process of mastering some drum tracks and have one quick question:
while mixing the snare and bass drum,is it advisable to have the bass drum set at a lower db level,and let the bass guitar bring the lower freq,s into the mix? :?

Comments

Davedog Thu, 11/10/2005 - 21:40

Uhhh.....yes?

Errrrr....No!

Ummmmm.....sometimes....

Ahhh......frequently........

This question has no 'answer' other than the one that is right for the material at hand.

This is where most relatively inexperienced mixers start reaching for a piece of gear other than a cue-tip.

Reggie Fri, 11/11/2005 - 06:47

eddies880 wrote: Im in the process of mastering some drum tracks and have one quick question:
while mixing the snare and bass drum,is it advisable to have the bass drum set at a lower db level,and let the bass guitar bring the lower freq,s into the mix? :?

If this is some kind of rock or metal or maybe pop or many other things.......I'm gonna have to say no. Make that kick hit hard! Like, -0.1 db . A bass guitar at this level will rumble far too much. Hopefully it was mixed somewhat correctly.
But you say mastering some drum tracks, so are you working with stems or something? If so, you will have to decide for yourself how to mix them.

anonymous Fri, 11/11/2005 - 06:50

eddies880 wrote: Im in the process of mastering some drum tracks and have one quick question:
while mixing the snare and bass drum,is it advisable to have the bass drum set at a lower db level,and let the bass guitar bring the lower freq,s into the mix? :?

Sounds to me like you're mixing rather than mastering. There's a pretty significant difference there.

Bottom line: don't mix with your eyes, mix with your ears. Move the faders until it sounds the way you want it to. If you don't know how you want it to sound yet, listen to some commercially produced CDs in the same style and decide which ones trip your trigger. Then, make it sound like that.

Then let a mastering engineer handle that part of it. That shit is black magic voodoo.

~S

anonymous Fri, 11/11/2005 - 10:50

TheRealShotgun wrote: [quote=eddies880]Im in the process of mastering some drum tracks and have one quick question:
while mixing the snare and bass drum,is it advisable to have the bass drum set at a lower db level,and let the bass guitar bring the lower freq,s into the mix? :?

Sounds to me like you're mixing rather than mastering. There's a pretty significant difference there.

Bottom line: don't mix with your eyes, mix with your ears. Move the faders until it sounds the way you want it to. If you don't know how you want it to sound yet, listen to some commercially produced CDs in the same style and decide which ones trip your trigger. Then, make it sound like that.

Then let a mastering engineer handle that part of it. That shit is black magic voodoo.

~SLike youre opinion,thanks-----thats waht I figured,but like to hear it from someone else,just maken sure Im not crazy.

anonymous Fri, 11/11/2005 - 10:58

Reggie wrote: [quote=eddies880]Im in the process of mastering some drum tracks and have one quick question:
while mixing the snare and bass drum,is it advisable to have the bass drum set at a lower db level,and let the bass guitar bring the lower freq,s into the mix? :?

If this is some kind of rock or metal or maybe pop or many other things.......I'm gonna have to say no. Make that kick hit hard! Like, -0.1 db . A bass guitar at this level will rumble far too much. Hopefully it was mixed somewhat correctly.
But you say mastering some drum tracks, so are you working with stems or something? If so, you will have to decide for yourself how to mix them.WEll---------------Im mixing/mastering the drum tracks------I still have the ability to either go up or down with the bass drum db.
I hate it when I already know the answer,I just likje to verify from some fellow recording enthusiast.