Regarding this question, I've always kept in mind what Chris Lord-Alge says. That is, he always worried about the mid-frequencies and let the rest (on either side of that) take care of itself. I find that works for me, as well. If I EQ anything on the low end, I try to use a shelf filter first and sometimes I use a high-pass (with a very shallow Q).
The roll off completely destroyed the vibe on my tv speakers, and shelf did well. The Radom idea might be misunderstood, the result of filtering is random results to different sources but if math genius then can be predicted if you gain headroom or lose it. Smashing music with limiters can result also in offset, it’s why some limiters offer dc filter. Even that can feel random like a dc filter from let’s say Rx Hum can offer back headroom or make worse and a eq roll off can do better instead, can be confusing to “random” results, can be deemed random to some. My observation to CZcams style videos is if a “audio engineer” is telling you “Right” then he’s teaching you wrong 😢. What’s this video about again…? I’m lost 😞. Hey, loved your recording session with Akon, success 🎉 somehow I ended here after.
The conclusion I came to after watching this video is that it's better to just go back in the mix and lower the bass rather than eq ing the master, right?
Finally an explanation about loosing headroom with Lowcuts. I searched a long time, thank you so much!
This concept of cutting lows on everything but the kick and bass has ruined my mixes for many years, thanks for sharing the wisdom 🙏
Regarding this question, I've always kept in mind what Chris Lord-Alge says. That is, he always worried about the mid-frequencies and let the rest (on either side of that) take care of itself. I find that works for me, as well. If I EQ anything on the low end, I try to use a shelf filter first and sometimes I use a high-pass (with a very shallow Q).
That might be a bit of an oversimplification, but there's a lot of wisdom in trying to let the music do the work for you.
notice this when i first started sampling recrods and hi-passing, never knew the reason but i knew it had something to do with phase shifting. 🔥🔥
Great video Matt!
The roll off completely destroyed the vibe on my tv speakers, and shelf did well.
The Radom idea might be misunderstood, the result of filtering is random results to different sources but if math genius then can be predicted if you gain headroom or lose it. Smashing music with limiters can result also in offset, it’s why some limiters offer dc filter. Even that can feel random like a dc filter from let’s say Rx Hum can offer back headroom or make worse and a eq roll off can do better instead, can be confusing to “random” results, can be deemed random to some.
My observation to CZcams style videos is if a “audio engineer” is telling you “Right” then he’s teaching you wrong 😢. What’s this video about again…? I’m lost 😞.
Hey, loved your recording session with Akon, success 🎉 somehow I ended here after.
There I am!!!!!!
I noticed you have the Fab set to zero latency. What happens if you flip it to linear phase?
@weiss advice so when you do highpass filter no makeup gain ?
It's not Voodoo it's Science!
no make up gain when doing it?
The conclusion I came to after watching this video is that it's better to just go back in the mix and lower the bass rather than eq ing the master, right?
It’s always better to just go back and make some change in the mix
yup.
No no they don’t
Never followed that rule because it never helped me in anything…and its probably one of the oldest rules shared online 😂
Shelves sound better
So don’t hi pass things.. ever..?
Sometimes hi passing something is exactly what you need. Getting rumble out of an acoustic recording for example.
@@WeissAdvice that’s what I thought, but I guess I don’t understand how you decide…
"if ur clients make music that bad, it's time for new clients"
Dude…Mathew is working with legendary top artists 😂