S
soundchaser59
Reluctant Commander
Spending the last few hours toying with this idea of creating an "EQ niche" for each instrument in a mix got me wondering.
I started by running a kick drum thru a low pass filter while running my bass thru a bass EQ pedal, and watching both of them at the same time thru a spectrum analyzer. I put the kick spectrum on top, and just below it the bass spectrum, so that I could see them both at the same time, to see if they were peaking in the same EQ range or not. I got it to where the kick is peaking in the 30-60hz range, while the bass is peaking in the 50-200hz range. It seems like this has made it easier to hear the kick and the low bass notes at the same time.
The article I read also said to use a fast compressor attack on the bass so that the bass note attack would not hide or obscure the attack of the kick drum. This works because the kick drum basically has only it's attack to make itself heard, since it has little or no audible decay or sustain in a mix. At the same time, the bass notes usually sustain or at least have a much longer duration compared to the kick notes, so the bass can afford to sacrifice it's initial attack (just 1 or 2 ms is more than enough) in order to make room for the kick to be heard. This makes the kick and bass play together better in the same EQ sandbox. All of this, so far, seems to be working.
So I got to wondering if I might shorten this learning curve some by asking all of you if you have any special tricks for EQ'ing the midrange instruments and voices so as to allow them each to be heard individually within a mix rather than being heard as a mass of midrange mud like some of my mixes seem to do.
I figure most of the instruments that give a song it's "identity" by creating chord progressions and melodies are midrange sounds that have most of their energy in the low mid, mid, and upper mid EQ ranges. In particular, I notice the guitars, the pianos/organs, and the vocals all tend to be most powerful all in the same range, and hence they end up fighting with each other to be heard in my mixes. Most of the fundamentals of these three timbres fall within approximately the 100 to 500 hz range. If the guitar is playing chords and the keys are playing chords while the voices are singing chords, the mix gets fairly blurry there quick. However, listen to a hadnful of great classic rock albums and we know it can be and has been done. How did they do it?
Some of the reading suggests that an engineer need not EQ the fundamentals of an instrument or a voice in order to give that sound its own space in the mix. It is logical to assume that I cannot EQ those three parts all within the 100-500hz range or elses they will never stop fighting each other. The reading suggests that there are ways to EQ each of these parts differently so that each one can seem to have its own space without fighting the other two.
So instead of spending countless hours experimenting with EQ and spectrum analyzers by trial and error, I figured I would try to shorten the slope some by asking all of you how you EQ guitars, keys, and voices in a mix in order to make each one sound like it has its own aural space.
Thanks in advance for any info!
I started by running a kick drum thru a low pass filter while running my bass thru a bass EQ pedal, and watching both of them at the same time thru a spectrum analyzer. I put the kick spectrum on top, and just below it the bass spectrum, so that I could see them both at the same time, to see if they were peaking in the same EQ range or not. I got it to where the kick is peaking in the 30-60hz range, while the bass is peaking in the 50-200hz range. It seems like this has made it easier to hear the kick and the low bass notes at the same time.
The article I read also said to use a fast compressor attack on the bass so that the bass note attack would not hide or obscure the attack of the kick drum. This works because the kick drum basically has only it's attack to make itself heard, since it has little or no audible decay or sustain in a mix. At the same time, the bass notes usually sustain or at least have a much longer duration compared to the kick notes, so the bass can afford to sacrifice it's initial attack (just 1 or 2 ms is more than enough) in order to make room for the kick to be heard. This makes the kick and bass play together better in the same EQ sandbox. All of this, so far, seems to be working.
So I got to wondering if I might shorten this learning curve some by asking all of you if you have any special tricks for EQ'ing the midrange instruments and voices so as to allow them each to be heard individually within a mix rather than being heard as a mass of midrange mud like some of my mixes seem to do.
I figure most of the instruments that give a song it's "identity" by creating chord progressions and melodies are midrange sounds that have most of their energy in the low mid, mid, and upper mid EQ ranges. In particular, I notice the guitars, the pianos/organs, and the vocals all tend to be most powerful all in the same range, and hence they end up fighting with each other to be heard in my mixes. Most of the fundamentals of these three timbres fall within approximately the 100 to 500 hz range. If the guitar is playing chords and the keys are playing chords while the voices are singing chords, the mix gets fairly blurry there quick. However, listen to a hadnful of great classic rock albums and we know it can be and has been done. How did they do it?
Some of the reading suggests that an engineer need not EQ the fundamentals of an instrument or a voice in order to give that sound its own space in the mix. It is logical to assume that I cannot EQ those three parts all within the 100-500hz range or elses they will never stop fighting each other. The reading suggests that there are ways to EQ each of these parts differently so that each one can seem to have its own space without fighting the other two.
So instead of spending countless hours experimenting with EQ and spectrum analyzers by trial and error, I figured I would try to shorten the slope some by asking all of you how you EQ guitars, keys, and voices in a mix in order to make each one sound like it has its own aural space.
Thanks in advance for any info!