How to soften distortion?
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How to soften distortion?
My distortion always sounds very gritty no matter what distortion plugin I use wether it's sausage fat or whatever. I kind if get used to it, not notice how gritty it sounds and then realise that everything sounds gritty in a shit way yet when I take it off I loose something. What I think I need to do is somehow soften the distinction with something after it in the chain. Any ideas, not really fussed on chorus or flanger, they soften it but you can hear what effect it is.
Re: How to soften distortion?
Turn down the wet/dry level for the distortion you're using
or
Have a dry version of the track and a wet version via a Distortion Send channel and mix them together til it sounds right
or
Don't use distortion?
or
Have a dry version of the track and a wet version via a Distortion Send channel and mix them together til it sounds right
or
Don't use distortion?
- Triphosphate
- Posts: 587
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2011 3:40 am
Re: How to soften distortion?
You can put an eq before the distortion and add some notches in frequency ranges that get too harsh.
Re: How to soften distortion?
Bandsplit the element you want add distortion onto and then only apply the distortion to a certain frequency range.
Re: How to soften distortion?
1) Be careful what you apply the distortion to (i.e. not really high pitched stuff - it will sound very shrill)
2) Wet/dry amounts can be very precise, try tweaking ~5% either way on something that sounds "okay" to try and improve it
3) Stack distortions, instead of using one plugin at 15%, use 3 at 5% in series - doing this you can also slightly change each unit and add more character
4) Add an EQ with notches before and after distortion to remove unwanted harmonics
5) Use minimal distortion and instead use an exciter afterwards to bring out the wanted harmonics
6) If using guitar distortion units, ensure the settings you're using are applicable to your basses/midranges (i.e. some distortion units have settings on that are beneficial for guitar based sources but will wreck other sounds such as preset EQ curves or amplifier cabinet settings)
7) Distortion will sound shit if your initial source is shit, it doesn't make things better. Large full frequency sources will generally benefit more.
2) Wet/dry amounts can be very precise, try tweaking ~5% either way on something that sounds "okay" to try and improve it
3) Stack distortions, instead of using one plugin at 15%, use 3 at 5% in series - doing this you can also slightly change each unit and add more character
4) Add an EQ with notches before and after distortion to remove unwanted harmonics
5) Use minimal distortion and instead use an exciter afterwards to bring out the wanted harmonics
6) If using guitar distortion units, ensure the settings you're using are applicable to your basses/midranges (i.e. some distortion units have settings on that are beneficial for guitar based sources but will wreck other sounds such as preset EQ curves or amplifier cabinet settings)
7) Distortion will sound shit if your initial source is shit, it doesn't make things better. Large full frequency sources will generally benefit more.
- Triphosphate
- Posts: 587
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2011 3:40 am
Re: How to soften distortion?
Use alternative methods of distortion? Like tape or tube emulators?
Re: How to soften distortion?
Wow thanks there's some cool things to try here, any more, I will try out all of them to get an idea of each sort of sound.
Re: How to soften distortion?
split equing into bands if that is your thing, but mainly using a send/receive set up for your distortion could be ideal in that you can change the amount of the distortion plug as a whole applied to the instrument, other than that, though to soften it up, just run something after the distortion that you think would soften it, whether it be compression or whatever (don't get mad about that, people)..
Re: How to soften distortion?
depends highly on the VST ur using, if it's a free one, it won't give you industry sounds.
Re: How to soften distortion?
Yeah was gonna say this... .. and I actually WOULD mostly use that on high frequencies :p distorted hats from breaks sound ill. Subtly of course.wub wrote:Bandsplit the element you want add distortion onto and then only apply the distortion to a certain frequency range.
Also try removing all distortion from the entire song? Could be a psycho-acoustic thing. Distorted elements just tend to stick out more in a mix... so if you were to compare the clean frequencies to the distorted ones, then yeah, they're gonna sound duller. Even though, when properly mixed down and whatnot, the whole tune might sound great anyway.
You could use saturators too. Like Fabfilter Saturn. Adds some grit without going overboard. Nice on a drumbus or something.

namsayin
:'0
Re: How to soften distortion?
Bullcrap. Camelcrusher is a stripped down camelphat, it's free and it sounds fucking great. I put it on a lot of my drumbusses and it's my go-to plug for basslines.Rappone wrote:depends highly on the VST ur using, if it's a free one, it won't give you industry sounds.
Cyanide is dope.
There's more good ones.
All these cool ass dubstep producers we're fans of are producers like you and me, except they make money off of their shit. And they use any decent tool they can get their hands on, including free shit. There's free and paid plugs with bad or good audio engines. You're paying for features way more than you're paying for sound when you buy plugins, and evne that isn't always true.

namsayin
:'0
Re: How to soften distortion?
So call me when you get a paycheck off a track you used free VSTs to build and stfu.Genevieve wrote:Bullcrap. Camelcrusher is a stripped down camelphat, it's free and it sounds fucking great. I put it on a lot of my drumbusses and it's my go-to plug for basslines.Rappone wrote:depends highly on the VST ur using, if it's a free one, it won't give you industry sounds.
Cyanide is dope.
There's more good ones.
All these cool ass dubstep producers we're fans of are producers like you and me, except they make money off of their shit. And they use any decent tool they can get their hands on, including free shit. There's free and paid plugs with bad or good audio engines. You're paying for features way more than you're paying for sound when you buy plugins, and evne that isn't always true.
Re: How to soften distortion?
Camelcrusher is mediocre at best. I have it, used it a couple of times, but theres always something flat in the result. Never dynamic enough. To each their own though, if that's your plan then by all means.
Re: How to soften distortion?
I'm glad we have veteran producers who've been at it for a month tellin' it like it is!Rappone wrote:So call me when you get a paycheck off a track you used free VSTs to build and stfu.Genevieve wrote:Bullcrap. Camelcrusher is a stripped down camelphat, it's free and it sounds fucking great. I put it on a lot of my drumbusses and it's my go-to plug for basslines.Rappone wrote:depends highly on the VST ur using, if it's a free one, it won't give you industry sounds.
Cyanide is dope.
There's more good ones.
All these cool ass dubstep producers we're fans of are producers like you and me, except they make money off of their shit. And they use any decent tool they can get their hands on, including free shit. There's free and paid plugs with bad or good audio engines. You're paying for features way more than you're paying for sound when you buy plugins, and evne that isn't always true.

namsayin
:'0
Re: How to soften distortion?
Just as an aside; I've read countless interviews with producers mentioning free VSTs or DAW-native VSTs. Just because you pay money for a third party synth or plugin doesn't guarantee it'll make you're music better and worth selling.Rappone wrote:So call me when you get a paycheck off a track you used free VSTs to build and stfu.Genevieve wrote:Bullcrap. Camelcrusher is a stripped down camelphat, it's free and it sounds fucking great. I put it on a lot of my drumbusses and it's my go-to plug for basslines.Rappone wrote:depends highly on the VST ur using, if it's a free one, it won't give you industry sounds.
Cyanide is dope.
There's more good ones.
All these cool ass dubstep producers we're fans of are producers like you and me, except they make money off of their shit. And they use any decent tool they can get their hands on, including free shit. There's free and paid plugs with bad or good audio engines. You're paying for features way more than you're paying for sound when you buy plugins, and evne that isn't always true.
- Triphosphate
- Posts: 587
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2011 3:40 am
Re: How to soften distortion?
Better idea: call us if that attitude ever gets you anywhere at all. Don't worry, we won't hold our breath.Rappone wrote:
So call me when you get a paycheck off a track you used free VSTs to build and stfu.
- InternetSlaveMaster
- Posts: 636
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2010 11:03 pm
- Location: Marengo, Illinois
- Contact:
Re: How to soften distortion?
Plenty of PROFESSIONAL producers using free/native plugins.Triphosphate wrote:Better idea: call us if that attitude ever gets you anywhere at all. Don't worry, we won't hold our breath.Rappone wrote:
So call me when you get a paycheck off a track you used free VSTs to build and stfu.
It's 2012, free software doesn't mean it's shit anymore.
Re: How to soften distortion?
Ugh. Native doesn't mean free. and plugins come in all shapes and sizes. It IS 2012, but still, 'pro' producers who claim to use free Plug ins and VSTs have more up their sleeve than that. A couple are great, I admit, but distortion plugins to be precise haven't really worked for me for free from what I've tampered with. Everyone has their own style though, if free plugins do the job for whoever then by all means make some paper with it. I find alotof free stuff either reduce sound quality or are just simply too flat/thin. Native stuff DOES work, so does free stuff buffed up by some other things, but anyway I'm not a pro at this, just from what I've learnt and used, free doesn't cut it as nicely.
You can all hate, call it bullcrap, in the end it's just my O, and it shouldn't be significant in any way to your production styles if you're confident with what ur doing.
You can all hate, call it bullcrap, in the end it's just my O, and it shouldn't be significant in any way to your production styles if you're confident with what ur doing.
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