
suprstar
It aint ez being green
Everything I've mixed so far basically sounds like ass.. I've heard something about every instrument 'getting its own space' in the mix, which I think means you want to keep ONE instrument dominating a given frequency range, keeping instruments out of each other's way.
Maybe kick drums dominate 100hz and below, bass guitars dominate 100-1khz, drums 1k-3k, guitars/vocals 3k-7k, cymbals 7k+. Something like that? Am I on the right track? Are my guesses at freq ranges close? Seems vocals and guitars are in similar a similar range, how do you deal with that?
So when tracking, should I attempt to cut freq's in other inst's freq ranges? Or boost the freq's in that particular inst's range? A combination of both? Adjusting the input gain on an eq effectively moves the 0db line up and down so maybe it doesn't matter if you boost the range or cut the out-of-range?
Would you recommend doing this at a tracking level, or wait til mixing, and why?
Maybe kick drums dominate 100hz and below, bass guitars dominate 100-1khz, drums 1k-3k, guitars/vocals 3k-7k, cymbals 7k+. Something like that? Am I on the right track? Are my guesses at freq ranges close? Seems vocals and guitars are in similar a similar range, how do you deal with that?
So when tracking, should I attempt to cut freq's in other inst's freq ranges? Or boost the freq's in that particular inst's range? A combination of both? Adjusting the input gain on an eq effectively moves the 0db line up and down so maybe it doesn't matter if you boost the range or cut the out-of-range?
Would you recommend doing this at a tracking level, or wait til mixing, and why?