when i listen on headphones its got loadsa bass but it dissapears when i put it thru speakers??????
http://www.yousendit.com/transfer.php?a ... 6B03F3DF0A
can anyone help out?
thanks man yeah the pad is from waldorf q synth sicknessekaj wrote:lol first thought is I have that pad sample aswell
I know what you mean, I can hear the sub on headphones..
What I would do to make it stand out more is EQ is a little more on the bass end (30-40hz) and maybe add a little (and I mean a little) tape distortion and make sure it's mono.
Nice tune btw, like the main bass synth and that beep
]8bitwonder wrote:thats what im trying to get and its really hard manekaj wrote:ps... if your sub was doing the same thing as your bass synth it would sound ultra phat man! Make that sub fucking mooooove
yeah, can't really hear panning on bass so no need for stereo, saves on phase probs.tmu wrote: like ; should i always make my bass in mono?
dunno what the "right" answer is on this one but adding a tiny bit of delay helps things move along a bit. problem is really mud i.e. you don't wanna blur the notes togetehr into mush. tiny amount of reverb can imply layering. chorus is useful on low mid basses. personally wouldn't put owt on the sub cos ur not gonna notice really imo.tmu wrote: and is reverb/echo in a bass track absolute no no?
again not a lot of point in a stereo kick, sending an amount of the signal to delay/echo works but probably high pass the result to avoid the mud again.tmu wrote: what about the kickdrums (especially if theyr low) does same rules apply?
Thanks for the info.narcossist wrote:yeah, can't really hear panning on bass so no need for stereo, saves on phase probs.tmu wrote: like ; should i always make my bass in mono?
dunno what the "right" answer is on this one but adding a tiny bit of delay helps things move along a bit. problem is really mud i.e. you don't wanna blur the notes togetehr into mush. tiny amount of reverb can imply layering. chorus is useful on low mid basses.tmu wrote: and is reverb/echo in a bass track absolute no no?
either:tmu wrote: what about the kickdrums (especially if theyr low) does same rules apply?
a] have a clear divide between sub>kick>low mids
ie. sub 20hz>80, kick 80>120hz, bass 120>wherver you want
b] carve out frequency troughs using eq in the relevant places to accomadate the kick - still recommend low passing the sub whatever though.
c] use a side chain compressor to duck the bass/sub when the kick hits.
think its a balance of keeping each sound free of interference but also not making the track sound empty/overly clean.
Make sure your sub is mono, make sure your kick and snare are mono also.tmu wrote:could anybody give basic bass/sub instructions for a starting producer...
like ; should i always make my bass in mono?
and is reverb/echo in a bass track absolute no no?
what about the kickdrums (especially if theyr low) does same rules apply?
please help a fellow stepper out.
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