N
NinjaStar
New member
Hey I have an odd question and I wasn't sure if it fits in this forum, but anyway...
I've always thought if instruments and sounds that they produce to have a dominant tone, which dictates the emotional impact of the piece of sound.
Sooo...
Q1: Does anyone know of ways to analyze this dominant tone and make it more apparent? eq and compression are the first things that jump out at me, but how.
Q2: Is it possible for a sound to have more than one of these tones that could be brought out or does a sound have many tones and the engineer brings out the ones that fit the mix?
One technique I know is finding the freq. of this tone and then finding the freq of the harmonics of the tone.
If anyone knows any sites I can read a little about this, let me know. Thanks
I've always thought if instruments and sounds that they produce to have a dominant tone, which dictates the emotional impact of the piece of sound.
Sooo...
Q1: Does anyone know of ways to analyze this dominant tone and make it more apparent? eq and compression are the first things that jump out at me, but how.
Q2: Is it possible for a sound to have more than one of these tones that could be brought out or does a sound have many tones and the engineer brings out the ones that fit the mix?
One technique I know is finding the freq. of this tone and then finding the freq of the harmonics of the tone.
If anyone knows any sites I can read a little about this, let me know. Thanks