ABLETON AND VINTAGE WARMER
Uploader Comments (keyboardista)
All Comments (27)
-
Sounds like a track from that Tropico game!
-
@nativeops That is a misconception. All the individual channels can hit red and it doesn't affect the sound quality. The reason for this is that most DAWs have 32 bit internal bit depht which allows massive headroom. Don't believe me? Check this out: watch?v=Ph1M3QZGku8&hd=1
But never drive the master output beyond 0db.
-
lol
-
This is like discovering america! :D
Every compressor can make it. Vintage warmer is better for other more detailed things.
-
you're clipping the same man
at input stage inside vintage warmer
mind on and be careful
-
lame song
-
how do you install vintage to ableton ?? can you make a tutorial please ???
-
Nobodies mentioned eq here.
eq is so important in achieving optimum head room.
EG - Taking the weight (low frequencies) out of your hihats with a high pass filter will help you free up some room.
Quite often my mixes peak in the red before I start eq'ing.
My advice is take everyones "rules" and "advice" from the comments, read them, then forget them. Use your ears. They're not just there to hold up your glasses.
DaveElyzium 7 months ago 3
@DaveElyzium thanks for your advise....really i followed their advices too :)
keyboardista 7 months ago
Good video indeed. I'm sure new Live users will appreciate this. I used to have overdriven, distorted tracks. After I learned how to use compression and saturation I got better. Now everything sounds clean, like a professional studio recording. For the iZotope thing, I would not use that on a master track.This goes for most other compressors as well though. If you equally compress the whole thing, you might not get you lead instrument in the lead
remixbysatan 2 years ago
thanks for that brilliant contribution...your comments really helps us understands mastering audio.
keyboardista 2 years ago
good job, you just completely squashed the entire mix.
Maybe you should read a book before you use one of those.
A little hint for ya: If your mix is already hitting the clipping light, you've already destroy the signal path. First you must mix the tracks, it's all about squeezing a group of tracks into a box. Then after everything sounds good, you can learn to apply the compressor.
nativeops 3 years ago 6
thanks for that useful comment,im not aware of the thing that from the start of the mix...the peak of the volume must be avoided.
keyboardista 3 years ago