T
TripleM
Well-known member
When I compare my mixes against commercial mixes, I can hear significant differences (I know that doesn't exactly set me apart from many other people around here
). There is just a smoother and warmer sound to commercial releases.
When I compare my mixes against commercial releases in a spectrum analyzer I can see differences. Commercial mixes have a nice smooth curve that starts low in the low frequencies, peaks at around 600 hz or so, and then has a nice smooth taper off to 20 Khz.
My mixes have a very rough curve. If the graph of a commercial mix can be described as looking like the teeth of a coping saw, mine look like something a lumberjack would use. OK maybe I'm exagerating a bit, but I hope you get the point.
My mixes also don't have that smooth taper from 600 hz to 20K either. There is a dip at about 1000 hz, a peak at 2400 hz and a dip at 9 khz. This seems to happen with every mix. I record mostly pop-rock with a couple of guitar parts, bass, drums and vox.
I'm wondering what is causing this. One thing I'm thinking about is my sound card. I have a Soundblaster 64 PCI card, which I know is not the highest quality. Additionally, the cable going from my mixer to the sound card is a cheapie bought at RadioShack. I don't know if that might be the cause.
Other components of my signal chain:
Mic: Shure SM57, and Oktava Mk-319
Mixer: Mackie 1202 vlz
Would buying a better sound card help with these problems?
Thanks, and please let me know if you need any other info to give an adequate answer.

When I compare my mixes against commercial releases in a spectrum analyzer I can see differences. Commercial mixes have a nice smooth curve that starts low in the low frequencies, peaks at around 600 hz or so, and then has a nice smooth taper off to 20 Khz.
My mixes have a very rough curve. If the graph of a commercial mix can be described as looking like the teeth of a coping saw, mine look like something a lumberjack would use. OK maybe I'm exagerating a bit, but I hope you get the point.
My mixes also don't have that smooth taper from 600 hz to 20K either. There is a dip at about 1000 hz, a peak at 2400 hz and a dip at 9 khz. This seems to happen with every mix. I record mostly pop-rock with a couple of guitar parts, bass, drums and vox.
I'm wondering what is causing this. One thing I'm thinking about is my sound card. I have a Soundblaster 64 PCI card, which I know is not the highest quality. Additionally, the cable going from my mixer to the sound card is a cheapie bought at RadioShack. I don't know if that might be the cause.
Other components of my signal chain:
Mic: Shure SM57, and Oktava Mk-319
Mixer: Mackie 1202 vlz
Would buying a better sound card help with these problems?
Thanks, and please let me know if you need any other info to give an adequate answer.