M
mixaholic
New member
what frequency range is considered the "bottom" is that 100hz and below or what?
tarnationsauce2 said:Humans have a hard time hearing low frequencies, and certain high frequencies at certain sound levels.
Do a search for Fletcher-Munson equal loudness on Google.
Here is a graph of "typical" human hearing response curve / dB level.
This is whal the "Loudness" button is "supposed" to compensate for.
20k is as high as anyone can hear. Most people can't hear much higher than 15khz. The 'air' in the vocals is closer to 10khz. Sibilance is between 5k and 8k.mixaholic said:that's a nice detailed graph. i'm going to search the fletcher-munson. thanks. does anyone ever put a low pass filter at 20khz when dealing with vocals?
Only if your neighbor's dog starts howling every time you playback that trackmixaholic said:will it make sense to roll off at either 16khz or at 20khz?
Jacobi1211 said:keep in mind, typical human hearing starts at 20Hz.
Not any more.RAMI said:Yeah, but Barry White's voice starts at 7hz.
bryank said:it depends.......
the "bottom" of an electric guitar can range formm 80-200htz
the "bottom" of a bass guitar is around 100htz
the "bottom" of a kick drum is around 60-80htz
but usually if you boost anything below 80htz, thats where you start to "FEEL" the bass, like when you feel the walls/floor shake from the bass response. below 60htz is when your start pushing some air and getting some rumble through the woofer of a speaker.