
Fishmed
Well-known member
Ford Van said:How do people "know any better" until they try?
Thomas Edison found about 18,000 ways not to make a lightbulb before he found the way to make it.
Ford Van said:How do people "know any better" until they try?
Amazing what one can find when they go back and re-read a thread from the beginning. This Fordie, is your very first response to Donny's querey on this thread. And you were absolutely right.Ford Van said:I would say that if you were having to cut/boost more than 12dB, THEN you didn't do a great job of getting the right sound tracking.
The LAST way anyone is going to get a commercial sound is by applying heavy EQ from project studio gear to a project studio recording.
Donny, a 6dB boost or cut in order to get something to sound right, while frankly sometimes necessary in the home rec world, is far from desireable. If there is that much of a bump or notch in your recording, better to try something like what Matt reccomends, boost a little on one track and cut a little on others. And then remember the next time you record to try and get the problem freq(s) ironed out in tracking via mic technique, room usage, etc. rather than having to try to "fix in the mix" with heavy post-processing.
As far as the bass vs. kick game, Again Matt is right about using counterbalance EQ as one trick to attack it. 400Hz is a common "signpost" frequency, but sweep around a bit and see what works best for each instrument as the frequencies can vary depending upon instrument, tuning, etc.
Ok, I have to admit that I inadvertantly left some other stuff out of my last post. I'm glad that we seem to be analyzing each other's posts and thoughts in a more constructive manner, because I honestly think that though we do have some basic philosophical difference, that we're realy not all that far apart.Ford Van said:Ok, it looks like we need to go back to your original post Mr.Glen, cause you seem to be talking a different game now.
Your first statement is especially true in the metal arena, and does apply to other genres as well. I give you that. But I still contend, and I think you'd have to agree, that if the tracking is not there, the mix will not be there regardless of the processing.Ford Van said:Okay. But the FACT is that heavy eq is in fact how MANY recordings that have a "commercial sound" were achieved by using heavy EQ, and a couple of guys who have actually WORKED on big time recordings have posted that they concur with this!
Not very metallic. In fact, the whole idea of heavy metal didn't even arise until you brought it up in post #24.DONCOL07 said:The material I work on most would be for modern dance music or what you would hear on many top 40 or country radio stations.
That again sounds very metal-centric to me. Now, I'll admit and grant you that I do not work a lot in metal, my regular associates and clientele just to not inhabbit that orbit of music, but I have dome my share of metal in the past, both live and in the studio. But I can tell you (and I'm not lying here), that for non-metal stuff I rare use more than four mics and often times only three, and I get excellent results. Yes, of COURSE I apply EQ and compression (and sometimes delay or verb, depending upon the needs of the mix) - I am not the "purist" or "documentarian" that Pipline makes me out to be - but rarely does it need any kind of boost, cut or compression that gets anywhere near the double digits. And, you know, if it does need that, I usually hear that it needs it before I put the take in the can for mixing and make the correction at tracking. Now if the time or budget can't afford that, or someone else has done the tracking and I need to polis it up for the mix, then I'll "fix it in the mix", of course. A guy's gotta do what a guy's gotta doFord Van said:I swear to god that this originally read "a 2 or 3dB boost or cut...". Oh well, even at 6dB, it is a silly comment.
There are simply sound that are NOT obtainable unless you apply heavy processing! A 6dB boost or cut with eq is relatively nothing for a kick drum! While we could talk for days about how we might possibly double track a kick drum, with one mic being just on the beater head to pick up just attack, and the other being outside the resonant head to pick up just resonance, the fact remains that you would probably apply QUITE heavy eq to remove unwanted frequencies from both mics!
I agree completly that bass is one of the most tempermental instruments when it comes to uneven amplitudes across it's spectrum. Add in the varying quality and techniques of the players themselves and you can wind up with a bass line that fades in and out of the mud like bad wow from a warped vinyl.Ford Van said:There is FAR too often that the bass players "tone" is lacking in the 400-500Hz range on the instrument itself. Certainly, if they had some different electronics in the bass, they could boost that before it is recorded, but there is certainly nothing wrong with doing a HUGE boost after the fact with an eq! In fact, I persoanlly think that doing like a 18dB boost at 400Hz, with a limiter on the bass can really make the bass HUGE sounding, but still retaining some good articulation. This is just a small example of how eq is used to trigger compresssion and cause a distinct sound that you CANNOT achieve any other way!!
No, that's going hyperbolic again. As you saw yourself, I said 6dB earlier, not 2 or 3. And when I did or do say those numbers, it's usually in the context of trying a counterbalance EQ; instead of boosting a deficient track by, say, 6dB, boosting the deficient track by, 3dB and cutting the blocking track(s) by 3dB. I still get the 6dB "spread" but, for me, it sounds less obtrusive - less EQ'd, if you will - than the single big boost, and it spends less headroom in the overall mix, leaving more room for other stuff.Ford Van said:But, by god, I guess any more than 2 or 3dB of cut/boost and all bets off?![]()
SouthSIDE Glen said:Oh for crying out loud, finster, I'm not hating on music, or on people for liking certain types of music.
Ford Van said:pipelineaudio, how often have you had to "fix" things in the mix because of poor tracking. Be honest.
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So much for the stopping of the name calling. Can't say I didn't try.Ford Van said:So, if you are not prepared to back your opinions with your work, then to me, your words don't mean much.