C
chessrock
Banned
Just wondering if anyone could help me out on this.
I've been having some problems, with my mixes, of being able to hear each instrument/track distinctly within the mix. In other words, everything just seems to blend together a bit too much.
I met an engineer at a party recently, who told me I should get in to the habbit of cutting some frequencies from my individual tracks. For example: using bass rolloff on vocals, accoustic guitar, etc. (another hint was to cut off everything below 80 when tracking guitar, as it gives the kick drum some extra breathing room).
The idea, apparently, is to cut off any frequencies that a particular instrument "doesn't need." Leave them for the other instruments that really need them.
Just wondering if anyone knows of a cheat-sheet I can get my hands on, so I know what frequency ranges a given instrument will generally occupy. Need to know which frequencies I will be safe to soften or rolloff for each given instrument, and which to leave alone. The guy I met at the party told me any beginner's guide to home recording should have something like that. Yea, right. Do you know how many "beginners guide"s are out there?
example:
Bass = occupies frequencies X to X
Guitar = occupies frequencies Y to Y, and sometimes Z.
And so on. Any suggestions?
I've been having some problems, with my mixes, of being able to hear each instrument/track distinctly within the mix. In other words, everything just seems to blend together a bit too much.
I met an engineer at a party recently, who told me I should get in to the habbit of cutting some frequencies from my individual tracks. For example: using bass rolloff on vocals, accoustic guitar, etc. (another hint was to cut off everything below 80 when tracking guitar, as it gives the kick drum some extra breathing room).
The idea, apparently, is to cut off any frequencies that a particular instrument "doesn't need." Leave them for the other instruments that really need them.
Just wondering if anyone knows of a cheat-sheet I can get my hands on, so I know what frequency ranges a given instrument will generally occupy. Need to know which frequencies I will be safe to soften or rolloff for each given instrument, and which to leave alone. The guy I met at the party told me any beginner's guide to home recording should have something like that. Yea, right. Do you know how many "beginners guide"s are out there?
example:
Bass = occupies frequencies X to X
Guitar = occupies frequencies Y to Y, and sometimes Z.
And so on. Any suggestions?