I'm referring to the common technique of centering (or making mono) most frequencies as you go below 200hz...
Now, I've tried centering the "sub range" on all my sounds individually in a project,
as WELL as the other method: making mono just the final mix's sub range.
Both methods seemed to not accomplish my goal. What's your guys' method(s) for making a tight (centered and not out of phase)/mono, and non-muddy and very distinct low end?
Also, what FX methods do you use? right now i'm using frequency splitting to make the low end mono, but I know you can also use mid/side processing to hi-pass the side channels, leaving only sub frequencies down the middle (mid)
At one point, i was even hard hi-passing all sounds that were not kick or sub...but i found this to be WAYY more thinning to the sub-range than just making every sound more narrowed individually.
This problem arose because, when you play most sounds by themselves, including synth presets, a good amount of sub accounts for its beefiness, but then it muds everything up summed altogether.... !!! even if everything has mono sub range!
So what methods work best without making your mix sound thin, frequency wise?
TL;DR
1.) do you center / make mono the sub bass range on all sounds individually, or on the master mix only?
2.) what's the difference between using freq splitting vs. mid/side to make bass mono
3.) what do you do about that low end rumble on sounds which are not your kick or sub bass? do you cut them out completely, or let them pass through and mix with the low end of your final mix? When I solo the low end range on my master output, should i also hear the rumble from other instruments or STRICTLY sub/kick drum?
