you guys rock
I had my bass amp up on a keyboard stand about 2 feet off the ground. Once I put it on the ground there was no problem. I just bought it at guiter center 2 weeks ago so it shouldn't be the amp.
my bass guitar however is a piece of junk and if I told you the make you wouldn't have heard of it before. But I did get my friends bass which he made himself and tried it and I had the same problems, so maybe my bass is OK
what kind of ratio do you use on compression of bass and drums. I find that I am limiting these and not putting much compression on guitars keyboards and vocals.
BC, I didn't try the whole process you laid out b/c I didn't know how to do that res filter thing. I made the EQ identical on the bass and it's duplicate. You're saying to make them different aren't you?
I was told that when you cut frequencies you should have a narrow badwidth so it spikes down into a point and to go down about 6 db and when I want to boost I give it a wider bandwidth and only come up 2 or 3 db. Would you agree with that?
Don't apply compression to the drums. They definintely shouldn't need it. You kind of got to play around with the settings to get it to sound right. I think a higher compression ratio is favored over a lower one, but I mabey wrong abou t that
Yes make them different One bass track should have the EQ settings to produce the tone you want. The other bass track should be cut on everything except a freqency that you feel needs more volume.
Whoever told you the thing about the bandwidth - well it seems kind of stupid. All a bandwidth control does is increase or decrease the frequency's band width over the spectrum. The "rule" isn't logical. Actually its really stupid...
Its up for debate however, somewhere around 3-6 dBs is doubling the percived volume or reducing it. Creating a narrow bandwidth and then cutting by 6 dBs as a rule of thumb aint going to work ever. What if I had a guitar that was 6 dBs louder at 250 then my other guitar, and I want to cut 250 in the mix down? The "rule" would fuck it up...
Personally I don't like to use a wide bandwidth in Mixing unless it is a filter roll off or shelf. It covers to much spectrum to be effective. Generally, when you mix you should be cutting anyway.
A wider Bandwidth adjustment may be better suited for mastering depending on the outcome of the mix.
Most instruments have sweet spots on an EQ, a wide band width may not provide as much control for enhancing them...
You migh want to boost the snare around 7k (for example) If that band width gets to wide your gonna start boosting the symbols bleed over (if you got mics for each drum.)
On the other hand you might want to remove the "box" sound from a kit which would call for a slightly wider band width around 400-600.
You wouldn't be able to say (before recording) that You are going to set the EQ frequency to 7k and widen the bandwidth to the widest possible setting and boost the amplitude by 3 dBs and that will yeild the mix that I want...
Because you will have no Idea the input volumes on the other intruments for one, and you don't know how load everyone is going to play everything - the singer is gonna be really good at changing volumes. Its just not a practical idea or logical statement....