How do you make a tune sound bigger
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How do you make a tune sound bigger
I was wondering if any of you guys can explain how to make a tune sound bigger.Also whats up with bass phasing.
cheers, kris http://soundcloud.com/krrs24/ambush
cheers, kris http://soundcloud.com/krrs24/ambush
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Post in the production forum I reckon dude
wub wrote: At the end of the day, always remember one thing - girls don't care about the mixdown
- ShadyBrady6
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Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Make sure you cut the lows off your massive lines if youre gonna stack it with sub bass, that should clean up that mix a lot
Last edited by ShadyBrady6 on Tue Jan 25, 2011 10:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Kicks hitting hard at 60 - 80 Hz
Low-end snares hitting around 200 Hz
Big subbass around 40 Hz
parallel compression on drums
etc...
Low-end snares hitting around 200 Hz
Big subbass around 40 Hz
parallel compression on drums
etc...
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Stick your head in between the speakers.


Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
sorry to hijack the thread but this also something i'm trying to figure out, how to get my tunes to sound phat (getmi ?)
obviously i'm not even trying to compare my tracks to professionally mastered and released tracks, but even then when i listen to other aspiring producers (which i doubt resort to professionnal mastering for unreleased tunes... or do they ?) tracks on soundcloud i clearly notice that i dont have to push the volume as much as i do when i listen to my tracks exported in mp3
to help you help me, here's basically how i home "master"(the term is used very loosely here) my shit: following the gospel of st macc i'm trying to get my mixdown to peak at around -5 db, filtering out the lower frequencies of everything not sub/kick, and i like to think that my mixdown doesnt sound too muddy, then (and thats probably what i'm doing wrong) i just straight up stick a limiter on the master, trying to get my track to sound as loud as possible without deteriorating the sound too much
problem is, i usually cannot get it to sound as loud as your average not professionally mastered (i think) unreleased artist track unless i set the threshold for the limiter really low, which obviously results in my track sounding like ass
so here are a few questions:
- i noticed that the lower my mixdown peaks, the more i can lower the threshold of the limiter and get the track to sound louder without being deformed too much (probably old news for most of you, yes...), is the solution to my problem to mixdown even quieter so i can push my limiter further ?
- in a lot of threads about mixdown/getting tracks to sound fuller/louder i read about additive EQ which i almost never use, i only reduce the gain of certain frequency bands never add to it, is this where i'm failing ?
- am i just missing the point here and people actually resort to someone else to master their tracks and i just shouldnt even try to do it myself (again not that i consider what i do to be mastering, just trying to get my tunes to be in the same ballpark volume-wise) ?
sorry for the tldr...
obviously i'm not even trying to compare my tracks to professionally mastered and released tracks, but even then when i listen to other aspiring producers (which i doubt resort to professionnal mastering for unreleased tunes... or do they ?) tracks on soundcloud i clearly notice that i dont have to push the volume as much as i do when i listen to my tracks exported in mp3
to help you help me, here's basically how i home "master"(the term is used very loosely here) my shit: following the gospel of st macc i'm trying to get my mixdown to peak at around -5 db, filtering out the lower frequencies of everything not sub/kick, and i like to think that my mixdown doesnt sound too muddy, then (and thats probably what i'm doing wrong) i just straight up stick a limiter on the master, trying to get my track to sound as loud as possible without deteriorating the sound too much
problem is, i usually cannot get it to sound as loud as your average not professionally mastered (i think) unreleased artist track unless i set the threshold for the limiter really low, which obviously results in my track sounding like ass
so here are a few questions:
- i noticed that the lower my mixdown peaks, the more i can lower the threshold of the limiter and get the track to sound louder without being deformed too much (probably old news for most of you, yes...), is the solution to my problem to mixdown even quieter so i can push my limiter further ?
- in a lot of threads about mixdown/getting tracks to sound fuller/louder i read about additive EQ which i almost never use, i only reduce the gain of certain frequency bands never add to it, is this where i'm failing ?
- am i just missing the point here and people actually resort to someone else to master their tracks and i just shouldnt even try to do it myself (again not that i consider what i do to be mastering, just trying to get my tunes to be in the same ballpark volume-wise) ?
sorry for the tldr...
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
This will explain how to fix this.krrs24 wrote:I was wondering if any of you guys can explain how to make a tune sound bigger.Also whats up with bass phasing.
cheers, kris http://soundcloud.com/krrs24/ambush
http://synth.tk/
Don’t worry about people stealing an idea. If it’s original, you will have to ram it down their throats.
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
This thread helped me out
http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.p ... +mastering
http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.p ... +mastering
- Original Face
- Posts: 118
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- Contact:
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
dfaultuzr wrote:sorry to hijack the thread but this also something i'm trying to figure out, how to get my tunes to sound phat (getmi ?)
obviously i'm not even trying to compare my tracks to professionally mastered and released tracks, but even then when i listen to other aspiring producers (which i doubt resort to professionnal mastering for unreleased tunes... or do they ?) tracks on soundcloud i clearly notice that i dont have to push the volume as much as i do when i listen to my tracks exported in mp3
to help you help me, here's basically how i home "master"(the term is used very loosely here) my shit: following the gospel of st macc i'm trying to get my mixdown to peak at around -5 db, filtering out the lower frequencies of everything not sub/kick, and i like to think that my mixdown doesnt sound too muddy, then (and thats probably what i'm doing wrong) i just straight up stick a limiter on the master, trying to get my track to sound as loud as possible without deteriorating the sound too much
problem is, i usually cannot get it to sound as loud as your average not professionally mastered (i think) unreleased artist track unless i set the threshold for the limiter really low, which obviously results in my track sounding like ass
so here are a few questions:
- i noticed that the lower my mixdown peaks, the more i can lower the threshold of the limiter and get the track to sound louder without being deformed too much (probably old news for most of you, yes...), is the solution to my problem to mixdown even quieter so i can push my limiter further ?
- in a lot of threads about mixdown/getting tracks to sound fuller/louder i read about additive EQ which i almost never use, i only reduce the gain of certain frequency bands never add to it, is this where i'm failing ?
- am i just missing the point here and people actually resort to someone else to master their tracks and i just shouldnt even try to do it myself (again not that i consider what i do to be mastering, just trying to get my tunes to be in the same ballpark volume-wise) ?
sorry for the tldr...
If your mixdown peaks at -5db you'll have to lower the threshold below -5db for the limiter to kick in. So having the mixdown quieter will make no difference whatsoever, other than forcing you to lower the threshold some more.
Boosting frequencies has its place. If you watch tutorials given by experienced producers you'll see selective, relatively small, boosts here and there - e.g. to make a snare snap or whatever.
I wouldn't worry too much about the perceived volume of your tunes. Be concerned about whether they sound as good as other people's tunes after you've adjusted for perceived volume (i.e. after you've turned down the professionally mastered track until it appears to be at the same volume as your tune).
Lastly, check this (duplicate?) thread:
http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=179852
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
well in case that part wasnt clear thats this thread i'm refering to as "the gospel of st macc"benjaminC wrote:This thread helped me out
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=74832&hilit=Mixing+mastering

anyway thx for trying to help out tho
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
It was for the benifit of the OP as well dude ( bloody threadjackers haha )dfaultuzr wrote:well in case that part wasnt clear thats this thread i'm refering to as "the gospel of st macc"benjaminC wrote:This thread helped me out
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=74832&hilit=Mixing+mastering, i read this thread a couple of times, and i think i learned from it on how to get a mixdown done, but i'm more asking about the next step, get my mixdown to sound louder to play it out/put it on soundcloud/whatever
anyway thx for trying to help out tho
Id expiriment with very subtle EQ boosts , dimension expanders and maximisers if I were you man
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Might be something here:
http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.p ... 2#p2203372
http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.p ... 2#p2203372
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
@ original face, i clicked your link, saw the same op asking the same question and thought u were takin the piss and redirecting me to the thread i was posting in, hehe thanks though a few pointers i might experiment with in there
@ benjamin c, sorry for the confusion then, but seeing it seems the op has two threads asking the same question to his name, surely its fair enough that i hijack one
anyway thanks for the tips guys
@ benjamin c, sorry for the confusion then, but seeing it seems the op has two threads asking the same question to his name, surely its fair enough that i hijack one

anyway thanks for the tips guys
Re: How do you make a tune sound bigger
Hi!
in my opinion there are a lot of factors to consider!
First things!! the arrange !!!if you don't have a good arrange (aka all your sounds need to be placed in a determinated range of freq.) your tune is never coming out phat!!
dynamics!!! to bring up your master meter on levels like -9 /-7 rms you need to push hard with comp and limiter plug-in before the master for example group the drum and compres a bit, group the synths and compress a bit, group the fx and compres a bit grop bass+drum and compress a bit too etcc...etc... until you come to the master and finally you compress for the last time!
Using sidechain comp, multi band comp, parallel comp and other advanced tecnique can be helpfull.
A good saturator some times can be better than a limiter, distort all your sound a bit to fatter it and eventually to kill undesirable peak.
on master don't use only one compressor, use an eq to roll off sub freq. below 30hz (and up to 16000 too), use the multiband compression and distorsion, and for last a loudness maximizer
in my opinion there are a lot of factors to consider!
First things!! the arrange !!!if you don't have a good arrange (aka all your sounds need to be placed in a determinated range of freq.) your tune is never coming out phat!!
dynamics!!! to bring up your master meter on levels like -9 /-7 rms you need to push hard with comp and limiter plug-in before the master for example group the drum and compres a bit, group the synths and compress a bit, group the fx and compres a bit grop bass+drum and compress a bit too etcc...etc... until you come to the master and finally you compress for the last time!
Using sidechain comp, multi band comp, parallel comp and other advanced tecnique can be helpfull.
A good saturator some times can be better than a limiter, distort all your sound a bit to fatter it and eventually to kill undesirable peak.
on master don't use only one compressor, use an eq to roll off sub freq. below 30hz (and up to 16000 too), use the multiband compression and distorsion, and for last a loudness maximizer
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