P
Pykon
New member
I know you're looking for simple rote procedures and recipes, we'd all love that. But honestly, pykon, that's just not how it works. If you want a starting point to work from, the best - and really the *only* - starting point is to listen to what you have in front of you and work from there. grab your favorite EQ and start working it over your track(s), paying attention to what the numbers on the EQ itself say, so that you can learn to associate sounds with frequencies and certain results with certain settings.
G.
Well,
I'm used to turning my ears as the main headlights in the darknes of my sonic ignorance (or unawareness). This way of learning mixing experience is a great and - I believe - unending adventure, and sometimes takes so long that I simply start thinking: Am I on the right path?
To find individual way of sound for each mix I always start from scratch - no pre-programmed eq's, multitrack templates etc - to keep the door open. If I read some suggestions here, I don't apply them as they are if they are not working the way I'm looking for - that way of experimenting just tells me what I can do, not what's right. You think doing so I'm on the wrong way? I'm not against what you say, just opened for suggestions.
And to put this discussion into context - what forced me to write this post was the bass track that crosses the frequency range limit of most stereos for several times during a song. When the bass plays A it can be heard, when C disappears in driver/amplifier filtering/splitting circuitry. That's why I asked if the bass fundamentals are reliable enough to boost them and enjoy the depth of sub-bass area in the studio and on some rare stereos.
I enjoy the discussion anyway - there's always something I can learn, especially if it's my own mistake I take criticism with some kind of pleasure and enthusiasm to improve.
And I'm sure someone else can learn from such thread, as he takes some rules as possible tricks to try and rehearse, not a ready guidelines.
Peace,
Mike