F
Fusan
Guest
How come to make my mixes sound life-like I have to cut out 250HZ by around 7db? Do we hear this frequency in everyday life because it doesn't seem that way?
Fusan said:How come to make my mixes sound life-like I have to cut out 250HZ by around 7db?
Fusan said:Do we hear this frequency in everyday life because it doesn't seem that way?
moses said:generally, no. although i don't really understand your question: what do you mean with "my mixes sound life"?.
moses said:and why cut out 250Hz by around 7dB? why not 212Hz by 4dB or 40dB?!
moses said:Of course you hear 250Hz in everyday life.
wow i was thinking the exact same thing......its the only thing i can think of that makes sensewlouch said:I can only imagine a cut of 250Hz that large is over compensation for poor room acoustics (i.e. standing waves etc) OR a poorly recorded instrument.
or both.
Fusan said:No idea. I just record in a small room and record onto my M-Audio Firewire Solo. I'm gona get an RME AD/DA soon but I don't know if that will make any difference but if i dont apply that cut then it's dullness
sleepy said:My guess is that you are mixing everything the same. In the process you're doing some high-pass filtering and some low-pass filtering and you're building up frequencies in this general area where you feel the need to eq for clarity-sake.
Light eq goes a long way over filtering.
So it is true that if you have to do a lot of eq at some point, something is not right. You will have cases where extreme eq might be necessary and beneficial but for the most part, if you have to, that should be a tip-off that something is not right.
sellinbeats said:take a step back and let yor ears rest before you mix.
Fusan said:But even the drums on my hard drive sound clutted and when I add sounds from Reason the same thing. I record vocals as best as I can but when I play it back on systems it's just there that low mid range dullness. I'm clueless