The main kick, main snare and secondary snare are all individually EQ'd. Mainly rolling out off their bottom end so they dont muddy up the bass. So basically you reckon I should duck some of the frequencies that correspond with other drums so each one will stand out? cheers for the response by the way!
If you don't run each individual drum sound to an individual mixer track, I would recommend trying that. I find personally that this makes it easier to filter / eq each hit accordingly. Maybe try making the kick and the snare play a wider role in the frequency space. Maybe use subtractive eq to remove some frequencies on the kick and snare thus allowing you to make them louder without clipping. Sometimes making some frequencies quiet is how you make the right ones louder. Sounds good for 4 hours
The main kick, main snare and secondary snare are all individually EQ'd. Mainly rolling out off their bottom end so they dont muddy up the bass. So basically you reckon I should duck some of the frequencies that correspond with other drums so each one will stand out? cheers for the response by the way!
unriselyrical 3 years ago
If you don't run each individual drum sound to an individual mixer track, I would recommend trying that. I find personally that this makes it easier to filter / eq each hit accordingly. Maybe try making the kick and the snare play a wider role in the frequency space. Maybe use subtractive eq to remove some frequencies on the kick and snare thus allowing you to make them louder without clipping. Sometimes making some frequencies quiet is how you make the right ones louder. Sounds good for 4 hours
tehsma 3 years ago