dyingserenity
New member
Im having trouble trying to get the kick to sound good with the guitar. Do they have to be the same frequency or what?
Im having trouble trying to get the kick to sound good with the guitar. Do they have to be the same frequency or what?
My band, on the other hand, our guitarist loves his typical scooped mids sound, and his guitar just completly masks both the bass guitar and bass drum.
I was thinking more along the lines of scooping the mids out of the guitarist himself. No anesthetic.My personal opinion is that you should slap your guitarist.
I set the guitar tones, and never had more than 2 or 3 on the bass,
What does that mean? 2 or 3 what????
The tiniest bit of a fraction of speakers even go that low. I doubt most "subwoofers" that come with all-in-one surround packages go that low. No fundamental anything is down there.Yeah, the fundamental of a kick is what, somerwhere in the 40-60hz range?
In the 80's many kick drums were nothing but a short 80hz sine wave. Much of the "important stuff" in the low tone of a kick is happening a bit higher than that even.Whereas the fundamental of a low-E tuned guitar is aroundf 80.
Yup. Two likely candidates: The drummer didn't hit the kick with enough balls, or you used an inappropriate tone on your guitar. All cases point to recording a part over again.If your guitar tone is masking your kick drum sound, then you're doing something seriously wrong somewhere.
Yeah, the fundamental of a kick is what, somerwhere in the 40-60hz range? Whereas the fundamental of a low-E tuned guitar is aroundf 80. If your guitar tone is masking your kick drum sound, then you're doing something seriously wrong somewhere...
BASS guitar, and I could understand.
What does that mean? 2 or 3 what????
If they're tuned to E. Maybe they're metal tuned to C or B or something, those are both in the low 60's.