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#361631 - 02/18/13 08:49 AM
Re: S950 VH2 test demo 1
[Re: Dnj]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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About EQ.... personally, I am pretty happy trusting the factory flat settings as the best jumping off place for a good recording. Only change it from there if you make a recording and it sounds bad.
Your biggest problem with EQ on globally is that, yes, a bit more sparkle might help your vocal, or brighten up a flat piano sound... But, at the same time, it turns your hi-hats into a nasty sibilant presence, makes your snare drum louder, all kinds of nasty things.
You are usually best served leaving the EQ off, and addressing each individual problem in isolation. If the piano needs brightening, do it on the piano part ONLY! If your vocal wants a hair more presence, do it on the vocal channel EQ (and don't forget, vocal presence EQ isn't up there in the 16kHz range!). But if you EQ the entire mix, you are usually creating as many problems as you are solving.
One last little trick I always do to a mix... Listen with the sound turned down VERY low! When you get your mix down that quiet, it is pretty easy to hear if one component is popping out too much, or getting lost. Turned up, you'll tend to be able to hear everything, but way down, and the balance becomes much more apparent.
Hope this helps.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#361634 - 02/18/13 09:01 AM
Re: S950 VH2 test demo 1
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
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About EQ.... personally, I am pretty happy trusting the factory flat settings as the best jumping off place for a good recording. Only change it from there if you make a recording and it sounds bad.
Your biggest problem with EQ on globally is that, yes, a bit more sparkle might help your vocal, or brighten up a flat piano sound... But, at the same time, it turns your hi-hats into a nasty sibilant presence, makes your snare drum louder, all kinds of nasty things.
You are usually best served leaving the EQ off, and addressing each individual problem in isolation. If the piano needs brightening, do it on the piano part ONLY! If your vocal wants a hair more presence, do it on the vocal channel EQ (and don't forget, vocal presence EQ isn't up there in the 16kHz range!). But if you EQ the entire mix, you are usually creating as many problems as you are solving.
One last little trick I always do to a mix... Listen with the sound turned down VERY low! When you get your mix down that quiet, it is pretty easy to hear if one component is popping out too much, or getting lost. Turned up, you'll tend to be able to hear everything, but way down, and the balance becomes much more apparent.
Hope this helps. Diki why not take a shot at Eq'ing Frans original posted recording just for fun would love to hear your mix.
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#361675 - 02/18/13 11:06 AM
Re: S950 VH2 test demo 1
[Re: Dnj]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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OH, and Point 1... You are kidding the audience that a full band is inside your arranger? It's not exactly stretching them to say the vocalists are in there too!
That's kind of the whole thing about OMB's. Nobody thinks for one minute you are doing it all by yourself... The hard part is convincing them you are doing anything at all! lol hey you two ...is this what they call English Humor?.. One of the things I try to do once during the first hour of any performance is to somewhat educate the audience as to what I'm actually doing and those sounds are emitted from the system. I usually say something along these lines "I know it's hard to believe, but yes, it's really me playing and really me singing. And, when you hear harmony, it's still me, and I'm singing with me and me." At this point I usually fire up the keyboard and turn off everything other than the right hand voice, which for demonstration purposes, is the grand piano. I then go into a rendition of As Time Goes By. After the first verse, I kick on some style-accompaniment parts, then kick on the vocal harmony. They love it, but ironically, some of them still don't seem to comprehend what we're up there doing. In the middle of a song, while you're singing and comping with your right had and changing chords with the left hand, there's always someone that comes up, tries to strike up a conversation, then tries to lean on the Bose speaker tower as if it were a leaning post. And, I'm not talkin' about nursing home residents - this happens with the young and dumb set in restaurant and nite-club settings. As for British humor, what ever happened to Tony Hughes? I haven't seen his name on the forum for quite some time. Same holds true for Scott Yee, and I really miss Ian The Voice Of Reason. Cheers, Gary
_________________________
PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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