Give Me My Remedy - New rock song.

  • Thread starter Thread starter PhilLondon
  • Start date Start date
HI
Cool song.
Just wanted u to know that on my office 2.1 speakers, there are some heavy struff going on in the bottom here and there.......

-einar-
 
I love the transition into the first chorus. That's power!
 
Yea I wonder if the acoustic isn't cutting through as well as it should. I don't think it's a volume thing, it might just need a bit of a mid boost.

I'll check out your song shortly. Thanks.
 
cook song. I listened to both mixes. I like the second one better. I'm not crazy about the crash cymbal sound, it's a little on the clangy side. That's a minor nit. All in all a great song and decent recording.
nice work.
 
We done some harmonies and it sounds okay but now I''ve noticed a few other issues which is annoying! I'll post something tomorrow maybe.

Thanks.
 
I liked those big crunch guitars. A little too much low end. But they're really big and still stay out of the way of the vocal.

Acoustic guitars sound decent. I wonder if a well placed low mid cut might clear them up a bit. I'd try a shallow cut, maybe an octave wide, somewhere around 300hz-500hz.

You could probably pull down the overheads a little bit.

I liked the vocals.

Bass sounded OK. A little indistinct. But for this song it wasn't a big deal.

Drums sounded OK. Kick was a little busy.

Overall it sounded pretty good.
 
Thanks mate. I think the bridge might be a little louder than the rest of the mix. It starts at 2:40. If anyone would give me a second opinion I'd be grateful. I'm not sure if it's the whole section or just the vocals.

I have no idea what an octave wide shallow cut is.... Do you mean the frequency/pitch from one note up to the next octave? And by shallow you mean cut by a few decibels?
 
Just rough approximations - nothing specific. A shallow cut/boost to me is like 1-2 dbs. Certainly no more than 3. An octave is another rough guess thing. To me it's kind of a medium-wide cut/boost. So if you made an EQ cut with 500hz as the center point, that cut would affect frequencies approximately half an octave on either side of that 500hz center point.

Again, this is not to be take literally. I just mean them general guidelines. Use your ears as you do all of this.
 
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