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Ugly EQ Frequencies

Ugly EQ Frequencies

LittleWing posted on Oct 17, 2020 #1
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Quick but great video!
Id like to add cutting 4k to this video. Gets rid of shrill cymbals. 4k also makes ride cymbals tingly tingly.
If you have EQ tips please share.The 3.3 k is new to me and can either be cut or boosted.It really effects vocals.
Acoustic players will want to try the 134 cut. It works great.

Assuming someone reading this has experience with EQ, starting with a Q (The width of the EQ curve that effects the frequencies around it) of 1 and cutting -.5 to -12db gradually while listening is a good place to start.

[youtube]KN9oSuz6C20[/youtube]

[img]https://www.ccisolutions.com/StoreFront/jsp/images/categories/Q-example.jpg[/img]
+4
Ernie440 posted on Oct 17, 2020 #2
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That's quite interesting, thanks!!!
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Zoot posted on Oct 18, 2020 #3
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learnt a lot here thanks for sharing.
axenvocs posted on Oct 18, 2020 #4
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Yes thanks for sharing I tried adjusting eq on a boomy old demo and yeah sounds better great share :W
rootshell posted on Oct 18, 2020 #5
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great info, i need to try this. thanks for sharing <3
LittleWing posted on Jan 15, 2021 #6
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Adding quick frequencies to boost a guitar or bass in a mix:

Bass :
Lo cut off 40hz
134 hz q=1-2 -2db
250-350 hz q=1 -1.5 db
1330 hz q=1 +.5db
4000 hz q=1 +.2db


Guitar:
Lo cutoff=80hz
134 hz q=1 -2db
200hz q=1 +1.2db
1500 hz q=1 +1db
5000 hz q=1 +.5db
MikeB posted on Jan 15, 2021 #7
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I was just preparing a post on mixing.

I mix and master a track with some intent, say uploading to wikiloops. After work, the mix makes me happy so uploading happens. Then referencing to peer material, afterwards, of course is not the tried and true way to master. My mixes often sound as if submerged in sludge compared to many bright, snappy mixes here at wikiloops.

I will take a look at this video. Also, for folks with a 'shooting from the hip' mastering style, this short answer may help. A few tweaks and some of my older muddy mixes sound alot better.

'The most common part of a mix that gets muddy is the 200-500Hz area. Fixing it is as easy as carving out a bit of space in these frequencies. Go back to your EQ insert on the tracks that are still sounding a bit muffled. Select the frequency range that you'd like to target and tweak it until it's sounding better.'

Happy mastering.:)
+2
LittleWing posted on Jan 15, 2021 #8
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"My mixes often sound as if submerged in sludge compared to many bright, snappy mixes here at wikiloops. "


Learn about hi pass filtering. Cut everything below 80hz for guitar and 40 hz for bass.Most EQ plug ins have it. A hi pass chops off all frequencies BELOW the frequency you tell it. Those sub bass frequencies serve no purpose unless you are mixing rap.

The next two frequencies will clean up mud and frequency bleed over:

250 hz. Slowly cut the db until it clears up but be careful how it interacts with kick drums.You may have to shift slightly to 230 or even 300hz depending.

134 hz This is the notorious "boominess" on the low end of guitars. Cut it down.You can probably go up to -3 db in cutting.

Hope that helps. Those frequencies work on instruments but mixes as well
You definitley understand when to use a tight , accurate "Q"(curve) to a wider general "Q" curve .On most EQs the "Q" value is simply "How wide the frequency curve and how strong it will effect the frequencies around it.

Problems on the treble side start at 1330 hz. this is the frequency of most fire alarms and also nails on a chalkboard. You can boost it to liven up a dead sounding instrument or vocal or else cut it if your high end is "shrill".You have to be careful with that one.
+6
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LittleWing posted on Apr 23, 2023 #9
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2.3khz
Best way I can explain is that a slight reduction "smoothes" whatever you EQ out. Try -3db for starters.
[img]https://i.imgur.com/aoQumvJ.png[/img]

4khz
A notch removes harshness especially in guitar, brass instruments and cymbals.Try -3db for starters.

[img]https://i.imgur.com/KR381vz.png[/img]

On any dynamic EQ, "Q" is how wide you want to notch that frequency. The wider the Q, the more it effects the frequencies around it.
A high Q value is a narrow cut.
A low Q value is a wider cut.

[img]https://i.imgur.com/nmALrXn.png[/img]
+1
cmdr_chill posted on Apr 23, 2023 #10
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Very useful. Thanks for posting.
hartmut posted on Apr 24, 2023 #11
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interesting what LittleWing is giving details to (134 Hz EQ Cut on Acoustic Guitars to prevent too much of boominess).
I can confirm this effect also, and in Audacity I typically do a "Analyze -> Plot Spectrum ..." and often find a Peak of Boominess on similar low frequencies and a little higher (e.g. 150 - 200 Hz), this depends on the guitar, wood body, where the Capodaster sits, etc., and many other factors, who knows. Always I had the impression - after applying the EQ Frequency Cut (not super narrow, more a curve with a width of 50 Hz) - that the "listening" afterwards is "easier" - has less aural "pressure".
+1
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