M
Maddox
New member
Are there such a thing as frequencies responsible for the "musicality" of an instrument ? Can a A chord on a guitar stops sounding like an A if some specific frequencie is missing, in terms of equalizing ?
I'm relatively new at the art of mixing. I don't know what it is, but it seems that, whenever i'm mixing a song, as the hours go by, I gradually loose the hability to identify the musicality (eq-wise) of the song.
I don't have the proper words to describe what I means, so I'll try to describe the "symptoms":
When i woke up in the morning and revisit the work i had done the day before, it's like the song is missing some important properties:
It sounds much muddier than I remember, the bass range of instruments is weaker than i recall from before, and - and this is what i find to be the most disturbing - the instruments sounds a little off-key, EVEN THOUGHT THEY ARE NOT, and this gives me the impression that the arrangement is all "out-of-place", as if the guitar is playing one song, the bass is playing another, the voice sounds impossibly disconnected from everything else.
That is specially true with distorted guitar, that, at first, I find it sounds good, and it has the proper amount of distortion I'm aiming for, but the next day it will sound as if the highs of the distortion are really accentuated, and this makes the guitar sound to be closer to white noise (static, airy, or wathever is the word) than to full, distinguishable proper musical chords.
Then I re-arrange the song, and it sounds fine again, but the next day it lost it all again.
So I tought: maybe, when I use the eq, I'm cutting important frequencies that my ears get used to as the day goes by. I mean, maybe I'm cutting frequencies that contains the "musicality" of the instruments.
On their own - when soloed - the instruments sounds in tune, but together is like they get "sterile", - no pun intended with the word "stereo" - forming an unbalanced, weak mix.
I do take a 15 minutes break for every hour I work. What I fell is that I need better skills regarding frequencies recognition.
I don't quite understand the Fletcher-Munson Curve situation, yet, so I'm putting it in terms I understand.
I have some questions (a lot of them, actually, because I´m trying to cover all my bases regarding this lost of musicality I´m talking about). I'll try to keep it concise, though
1 - (Just repeting the question of the beggining)
Are there such a thing as frequencies responsible for the "musicality" of an instrument ? Can a A chord on a guitar stops sounding like an A if some specific frequencie is missing, in terms of equalizing ?
2 - If I boost, let's say the 250 -500Hz range of a guitar, should I cut the same freq range on every other instrument ? Or does this only applies to instruments that have some similar functions and properties, like Kick and Bass, or Voice and Strings ?
3 - If I shelve out the Upper Mid Range from the Bass and the Kick to make room for the guitars and voice, will I be compromising the sound of the kick and the bass ?
4 - I found myself using two, sometimes 3 equalizers on the chain in order to make an instrument blend better with the others. For instance, in the first equalizer on the chain of a guitar, I´ll shelve out some Bass Range so it doesn't get in the way of the bass. I also do some narrow cutting on some other freq so it doesn't get in the way of the snare, voice, etc. Then, I use a second Eq where I sweep the spectrum, find a frequencie range that I enjoy, and boost it little and wide, even if I cutted part of this frequency in the previous Eq. I have the impression that this second equing provides better control over frequencies, in a way that it prevents masking from overdoing. Am I at least a little right to think like that ? Do you guys do that (using two or more eq, maybe two or more compressor, also) ?
5 - I often find the meter of the Master Bus going above 0dB, and I suspect that the overall volume of a song can change drastically the nature of the problems to be fixed with mixing. Does that make sense, and if so, why ?
5a - Should I keep the overall volume of a mix below 0db, or, as long as it doesn't clip, it's fine ?
5b - Does the same rules for overall volume applies to the volume of each instrument alone ?
6 - Is it right to assume that I should:
a) always shelve out - if not cut entirely - the low end of high frequency instruments like Cymbals ?
b) always shelve out - if not cut entirely - the high end of low frequency instruments like Bass and Kick ?
c) always try to boost - a little and wide - the mid range of mid-frequency instruments, like guitars, piano and voices, although trying to prioritize different parts of the mid-range for every instruments, in order to prevent masking ?
Oh, I still have so many questions, but I'll stop it here.
Thanks, and sorry about the size of the post.
I'm relatively new at the art of mixing. I don't know what it is, but it seems that, whenever i'm mixing a song, as the hours go by, I gradually loose the hability to identify the musicality (eq-wise) of the song.
I don't have the proper words to describe what I means, so I'll try to describe the "symptoms":
When i woke up in the morning and revisit the work i had done the day before, it's like the song is missing some important properties:
It sounds much muddier than I remember, the bass range of instruments is weaker than i recall from before, and - and this is what i find to be the most disturbing - the instruments sounds a little off-key, EVEN THOUGHT THEY ARE NOT, and this gives me the impression that the arrangement is all "out-of-place", as if the guitar is playing one song, the bass is playing another, the voice sounds impossibly disconnected from everything else.
That is specially true with distorted guitar, that, at first, I find it sounds good, and it has the proper amount of distortion I'm aiming for, but the next day it will sound as if the highs of the distortion are really accentuated, and this makes the guitar sound to be closer to white noise (static, airy, or wathever is the word) than to full, distinguishable proper musical chords.
Then I re-arrange the song, and it sounds fine again, but the next day it lost it all again.
So I tought: maybe, when I use the eq, I'm cutting important frequencies that my ears get used to as the day goes by. I mean, maybe I'm cutting frequencies that contains the "musicality" of the instruments.
On their own - when soloed - the instruments sounds in tune, but together is like they get "sterile", - no pun intended with the word "stereo" - forming an unbalanced, weak mix.
I do take a 15 minutes break for every hour I work. What I fell is that I need better skills regarding frequencies recognition.
I don't quite understand the Fletcher-Munson Curve situation, yet, so I'm putting it in terms I understand.
I have some questions (a lot of them, actually, because I´m trying to cover all my bases regarding this lost of musicality I´m talking about). I'll try to keep it concise, though

1 - (Just repeting the question of the beggining)
Are there such a thing as frequencies responsible for the "musicality" of an instrument ? Can a A chord on a guitar stops sounding like an A if some specific frequencie is missing, in terms of equalizing ?
2 - If I boost, let's say the 250 -500Hz range of a guitar, should I cut the same freq range on every other instrument ? Or does this only applies to instruments that have some similar functions and properties, like Kick and Bass, or Voice and Strings ?
3 - If I shelve out the Upper Mid Range from the Bass and the Kick to make room for the guitars and voice, will I be compromising the sound of the kick and the bass ?
4 - I found myself using two, sometimes 3 equalizers on the chain in order to make an instrument blend better with the others. For instance, in the first equalizer on the chain of a guitar, I´ll shelve out some Bass Range so it doesn't get in the way of the bass. I also do some narrow cutting on some other freq so it doesn't get in the way of the snare, voice, etc. Then, I use a second Eq where I sweep the spectrum, find a frequencie range that I enjoy, and boost it little and wide, even if I cutted part of this frequency in the previous Eq. I have the impression that this second equing provides better control over frequencies, in a way that it prevents masking from overdoing. Am I at least a little right to think like that ? Do you guys do that (using two or more eq, maybe two or more compressor, also) ?
5 - I often find the meter of the Master Bus going above 0dB, and I suspect that the overall volume of a song can change drastically the nature of the problems to be fixed with mixing. Does that make sense, and if so, why ?
5a - Should I keep the overall volume of a mix below 0db, or, as long as it doesn't clip, it's fine ?
5b - Does the same rules for overall volume applies to the volume of each instrument alone ?
6 - Is it right to assume that I should:
a) always shelve out - if not cut entirely - the low end of high frequency instruments like Cymbals ?
b) always shelve out - if not cut entirely - the high end of low frequency instruments like Bass and Kick ?
c) always try to boost - a little and wide - the mid range of mid-frequency instruments, like guitars, piano and voices, although trying to prioritize different parts of the mid-range for every instruments, in order to prevent masking ?
Oh, I still have so many questions, but I'll stop it here.
Thanks, and sorry about the size of the post.