A
Atipp
New member
I'm reading a lot about EQing for recording, and a lot of what I read says to cut down on the frequencies of one instrument and put them back with another. What I mean is Take out a bunch of your lows (40-100hz) from the guitar, and add those same frequncies to the bass guitar. Now I realize that this is no golden rule, but I like where there going with this for clarity sake. My question is this:
An instrument gets/has tones at so many different points in the process. For example; a guitar has a natural sound which wiuld include many frequencies. When you amp it, even with no EQ to the amp, it'll still get a change in it's frequencies (tones and sub tones, aka timber?) then into the mixer it might geta little more EQ tweaking. So when you get to mixdown how do you know that by taking out a few Db's, you add back the right amount with the next instrument. Say that through the process you guitar ended up with a bunch of lows. If you take out threedb from that and add 2 or 3 to the bass, what if you still have to much low.
I guess what I'm asking, is Do I need to record things at a sort of neutral EQ so that I can maintain control of my sanity?
Thanks
Adam T.
adtsks@citlink.net
An instrument gets/has tones at so many different points in the process. For example; a guitar has a natural sound which wiuld include many frequencies. When you amp it, even with no EQ to the amp, it'll still get a change in it's frequencies (tones and sub tones, aka timber?) then into the mixer it might geta little more EQ tweaking. So when you get to mixdown how do you know that by taking out a few Db's, you add back the right amount with the next instrument. Say that through the process you guitar ended up with a bunch of lows. If you take out threedb from that and add 2 or 3 to the bass, what if you still have to much low.
I guess what I'm asking, is Do I need to record things at a sort of neutral EQ so that I can maintain control of my sanity?
Thanks
Adam T.
adtsks@citlink.net