The Low End Mix Trick - TheRecordingRevolution.com

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Something I learned from Jacquire King to get your low end to sit just right in the mix, no matter where you mix.
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  • @recordingrevolution
    @recordingrevolution4 жыл бұрын

    ►► Create radio-worthy songs from your bedroom. Download my FREE Radio Ready Guide and learn my 6 step process → RadioReadyGuide.com

  • @kingkyoga9263

    @kingkyoga9263

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why did you turn the gain back down on the kick then?

  • @Tornadominsk

    @Tornadominsk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kingkyoga9263 😂😂😂

  • @ACES-BRAZIL

    @ACES-BRAZIL

    3 ай бұрын

    no man!

  • @SwordOSouls
    @SwordOSouls8 жыл бұрын

    so today i decided to implement this trick in a metal mix i was doing for a client. I got the bass and kick drum balanced to each other and then continued to finish the mix. When i was close to finishing i felt there was not enough low end so turned it up in the mix, exported out and tested it outside the mixing space and lo and behold i was wrong. By trusting my un acoustically treated room i added to much low end to what i felt wasn't enough. I then went back and rebalanced the low end with this trick and got great results. For me this trick really worked and i got my mix to sound great and the client was very happy.

  • @darrylcooper9214

    @darrylcooper9214

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hello... I have a question: so did you put the VU meter on both channels? The Kick & the Bass channel? Or just on the mix buss or do you route the two together? Please Help!! Because every time I mix a track the way I like it & the then I go & put it in my car or another Audio source & there no low end of not enough low end so it's sounds really thin & I would have to turn up the Bass on the device or on my radio in my car & that drives me crazy

  • @howtomakeyourownmusic8084

    @howtomakeyourownmusic8084

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@darrylcooper9214 It looks like he has it on the mix bus only, then solo's the bass guitar so it hits -3, then bring in the bass guitar and aim for it to hit "0"... Is your room treated or untreated?... You might also try iZotope Tonal Balance Control along with this trick, it would work well also and give you an idea of low end targets (I tried that on my untreated room and got better results also).

  • @JoshuaLoveofficial
    @JoshuaLoveofficial6 жыл бұрын

    Thats nice. I heard this also on Pensado's Place and my first mix with this trick I got tons of compliments on that balance. Great tip.

  • @RoryLandt
    @RoryLandt7 жыл бұрын

    having this knowledge has instantly improved my mixes.

  • @ztz1775
    @ztz17758 жыл бұрын

    That is exactly what I was looking for over a year! Thank you!!!!

  • @ego_sarx
    @ego_sarx8 жыл бұрын

    This trick is an awesome one... I've tried it on a couple of my mixes and, you know what?, these just came to life... I had volume slides all messed, compressors here and there, EQ over EQ... I've deleted every single plugin in the chain and started all over again.... I just have the EQ's for high-pass and a couple of compressors and... wooooh! sounds waaaaay better than what I had... thanks for sharing.

  • @psufilm
    @psufilm7 жыл бұрын

    I want to say that Graham is a really nice guy and he offers a lot of useful advice. I want to say thank you Graham for your generosity. Most of the tips offered on Recording Revolution are spot on, but I want to respectfully critique this one. The appropriate relative volume with regards to the kick and bass is going to be different for every song. Some songs are going to work with a more prominent kick and others with a more prominent bass. It really just depends on the song, arrangement, character of the bass and kick and the role each one plays in the song. I want to caution everyone against using this technique as a "do this every time" trick. This trick may work for some songs/mixes but may be not right for others. It's always best to use your ears and know your monitors.

  • @joshmiller5374
    @joshmiller53748 жыл бұрын

    I've seen a ton of mix tutorials and tricks, but this was probably the most helpful. Can't wait to use this on more mixes!

  • @joybeats2425
    @joybeats24255 жыл бұрын

    i LOVE LOVE LOVE it when good willing folks share golden tips such as this. i have no intention of going back to school anymore nor any school related to music just to produce whats strumming in my hearts strings. so i take it super seriously when in depth things like this are dropped to the world wide web for an everyday nobody jane like me to try out and use. appreciate it you so much cause im learning all on my own, but not really lol. i am listening 😘

  • @AmpsforBuddha
    @AmpsforBuddha8 жыл бұрын

    Now these are the tutorials I enjoy and frankly, need. …Thank you!

  • @Charlyfromthenuclearcity
    @Charlyfromthenuclearcity8 жыл бұрын

    Elementary acoustics : Two coherent sources together : +3dB Two phase-matched sources together : +6dB

  • @MichaGutkowski

    @MichaGutkowski

    7 жыл бұрын

    thank you for the clarification, I was wandering where to pin 6db here.

  • @livingdeadwolf

    @livingdeadwolf

    7 жыл бұрын

    No: Coherent sources = same frequency; Incoherent sources = different frequency; Adding incoherent sources of same level = +3dB Adding coherent sources of same level= depends on the phase shift between the two Adding coherent sources of same level, same phase= +6dB

  • @dedskinprodcerdj4273

    @dedskinprodcerdj4273

    7 жыл бұрын

    wait ,can you elaborate the first post a bit more . i know there are few different dB methods , first one is based on what we hear , the other one is digital , based on numbers not ear ...so which one are you talking about and can you elaborate more on the subject matter . im interested . Or did i get it wrong , i dont think dB is a sound unit , its a difference unit , can be used anywhere , but since modern DAWS came along , they introduced another standard , there is also RMS and Peak , a lot of stuff there

  • @Charlyfromthenuclearcity

    @Charlyfromthenuclearcity

    7 жыл бұрын

    Well, I'm not a pro at sound theory/acoustics, but here's what I got from my teacher couples years back. First, few of the dB scales are based on ear. In every scale the 0dB have a reference level. Decibels are just logarithmic scales, so you have to use the one that suits the situation. - dBFS : As you said, digital audio is measured with dBFS where 0dB is the maximum (since you're "using" all bits at 0dBFS). Knowing that, it's easy to understand why there's more dynamic in a 24bit recording than a 16bit one. - dBVU : In the analog world 0dBVU correspond to 1,228V RMS at 600 Ohm using a 1kHz sinus signal. In the digital realm the common equivalence is 0dBVU = -18dBFS (although there is no actual norm about this). To put it simple, this equivalence helps to "simulate" the headroom of an analog console, so you will clip at +18dbVU (0dBFS). VU-meters are used to calculate the average volume of a program. On the other hand, a Peak meter will give you the actual peaks of the program. RMS and Peak are ways to measure an electric signal, and didn't came with DAWs. - LKFS/LUFS : two names for the exact same measure (Loudness Units refered to Full Scale). This a pretty recent scale based on the EBU R128 norm (European Broadcasting Union). It's also often used at mastering, since it's more representative of the loudness perceived by human ear that dBVU. You can find all the info about EBU R128 here : tech.ebu.ch/docs/r/r128-2014.pdf Also some stuff about the loudness war and the use of LUFS: www.soundonsound.com/techniques/end-loudness-war. Actually two dB scales based on human ear exist. It is based on the Fletcher-Munson curves, which show that human ear have a more flat frequency response at high volumes. I think this is also used for LUFS. dB(A) : using the ear frequency response at low acoustic levels (from 0dBSPL to 55dBSPL) dB(B) : using the ear frequency response at medium levels (from 55dBSPL to 85dBSPL) dB(C): using the ear frequency response at high levels (from 85dBSPL to 130dBSPL). By the way, dB SPL (for Sound Pressure Level), is the dB scale used to measure sound in the acoustic realm (well, the name of this scale make it pretty obvious). :P More info here : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal-loudness_contour Also, to end it, no the electrical side of things : - dBu (or dBm) : 0dBu corresponds to 0,775V at 600 Ohm. A common measure in the analog world. - dBV : 0dBV corresponds to 1V at 600 Ohm. Here's a little chart I found for equivalences : 0,775V = 0 dBu = 0 dBm 1V = 0 dBV = = +2,2 dBu 0 dBVU = +4 dBu = 1,228 V = +1,78 dBV Analog to digital (not real norm, but the commonly used values) : Europe : -18 dB fs = +4 dBu = 0dBVU USA : -20 dB fs = +4 dBu = 0dBVU Thanks for asking, I had to go through some internet pages to remember all that stuff. I gave a heads up to myself too :) Sorry if all this is uneasy to read, my English grammar might not be the best since I'm French.

  • @dedskinprodcerdj4273

    @dedskinprodcerdj4273

    7 жыл бұрын

    yes now see that is it , i know it all , just not in numbers , so back to the bost , +3 +6 dB , that is -DBFS scale ,where minimum is -64 i think , max +12, you were referring to that scale right ? in other words DAW scale

  • @rico879
    @rico8795 жыл бұрын

    This is a great starting point for any style I think. For pop and indie this is a basic setup. Thanks for sharing, this is very useful! Once the low end is sitting nicely, the rest of the mix comes together.

  • @SpiceProductionsProducerVideos
    @SpiceProductionsProducerVideos8 жыл бұрын

    I'm using the technic on a mix for a beat I made. However, I used it on my kick and 808 instead of kick and bass guitar as shown in the video. I am pleased with the results. My low end sits just right. Thanks for the tip!

  • @RogerioValgode
    @RogerioValgode4 жыл бұрын

    Still using this in 2019. Works great!

  • @thesnipecatcher116
    @thesnipecatcher1166 жыл бұрын

    Nice practical tip, thanks! Made the mistake of reading the comments section. I’m amazed how many folks are more qualified to mix than Jacquire King! More amazed at the arrogant responses from folks who didn’t even understand what they saw. Crazy times

  • @bovice5072

    @bovice5072

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure I see what you see. Yours is the only pompous comment I've read.

  • @HTDav01
    @HTDav015 жыл бұрын

    Loved this. Same trick with some modification for balancing instruments and vocal lines against each other is what I use most often for general loudness balancing before punching the low end and bringing in each section of the band around. Some instruments are more solo and on target while others are melodic backing--both important but having different roles in the loudness dynamic. Using +3 on a fader and -3 to 0 in a vu meter to balance two instruments to each other lets you make some instruments 2x as loud as others at 0 on the fader, when you bring the softer instrument down from +3. Then the balance of the two can go to a group or aux and be mixed with the rest. Over and over, layer after layer, this is mixing at it's most basic dynamic. It's that last, awesome and easy step to get it just right.

  • @j.castillo5654
    @j.castillo56545 жыл бұрын

    Th. You. Graham. The video was informative and I had no problem understanding at all. Made perfect sense. Your way of explaining is easy to understand and I don't see why people would not see this as being an easy method of balancing the lows . I know there are many ways to do the same thing but this seems very straightforward and a great method. I hope people can learn to be more positive and uplifting in their comments and mannerisms. Im thankful people like you take the time to post info like this , for over a decade I have learned more from people like you on you tube than I can shake my finger at. I for one am thankful.

  • @ni13ma
    @ni13ma5 жыл бұрын

    3:34 random breathe noise coming from left side scared me

  • @samsonkirigua
    @samsonkirigua7 жыл бұрын

    This is a really great tip, been using this approach to starting my mixes for two weeks now, it definitely made the difference. 😀

  • @Recovery_Station
    @Recovery_Station Жыл бұрын

    I just can't thank you enough for that. I'm a bedroom kinda guy with no monitors or room treatment at all (flat, family, neighbours, you name it). And everytime I mix a song I struggle to find balance in low end area resulting either too much bass or lack of. And after I tried this - boom. Sounds great everywhere you play it. This trick will now always be in my "Soundguy's handbook" lol

  • @azaelbuendia3118
    @azaelbuendia31187 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video!! It is a neat trick to get the low end level right in an unfamiliar room. One thing though. If you add up a source and its duplicate, for example two kick drums, the actual dB increase is 6dB as the phase relationship is at 360 degrees, they match 100%. However, if you add two not related sources, say the bass and the kick drum, then as you said the increase would be 3dB. Just to avoid any misunderstandings. Your channel and website is awesome! I am a fan. Thanks again!

  • @mixedbybrayz
    @mixedbybrayz8 жыл бұрын

    That tip is so brilliant - thank you!

  • @Opeckie
    @Opeckie8 жыл бұрын

    So glad you explained this better! I kind of had the idea but your in depth explanation made it crystal clear! Thank you again Graham!

  • @ryanreiss1172
    @ryanreiss11727 жыл бұрын

    Holy crap. This is genius. I'm definitely going to try this and see how it translates to current finished mixes. Excellent balance starting point! Thanks Graham!

  • @BM-zv4xz
    @BM-zv4xz8 жыл бұрын

    That's a nice tip, and it should cover the kick/bass part of the balance. However, it's only a small fraction of properly balancing the low end - which is to balance kick and bass relative to the rest of the instruments. That's when the real "too little / too much bass" problem lies. Kick and bass can be matched perfectly against each other, but there still may be too much or too little bass relative to the rest of the band. I wonder if there are any rules of thumb that help solve this part of the problem (other than using your ears, of course, and your gear - but now we're back where we started).

  • @manifestgtr

    @manifestgtr

    Жыл бұрын

    There aren’t any that I’m aware of…there’s that old pink noise trick but to be honest, I’ve never tried that. This isn’t meant to be a hard and fast, “set it and forget it” type trick. It’s just a small, early step in getting your low end right. It might also help younger/less experienced engineers to hear what a well level-matched kick/bass sounds like.

  • @jjjuhg
    @jjjuhg7 жыл бұрын

    easier trick: if you wanna keep all the other tracks where they are, if you're happy so far... the bass should be lower than the kick with 3 to 5 db. for example, the kick goes to minus 10 db on it's channel fader, then the bass should be at least at minus 13, maybe minus 14 or 15. of course, we all know that any track will have peaks and lows, but see where the average volume is. For me, if I do this, it works perfect on anything. For a test, go to one of your good projects and see if you set the volumes like this, I bet you did. Cheers!

  • @oDTRT

    @oDTRT

    7 жыл бұрын

    good tip

  • @iamgreatness6649

    @iamgreatness6649

    5 жыл бұрын

    Bass as in 808?

  • @umpontonouniverso

    @umpontonouniverso

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeeees :)

  • @DrillaMotions

    @DrillaMotions

    2 жыл бұрын

    this what i do, if its an 808 i might go 6db down as i like to keep stuff in multiples of three

  • @MichaelCozineSounds
    @MichaelCozineSounds8 жыл бұрын

    Graham, you have been the single most helpful person in my mixing/recording career.

  • @plasticplane93
    @plasticplane935 жыл бұрын

    Holy hell it works!!! Cant believe it. My kick cuts through the mix pretty well with this method. Thank you!

  • @MikaKotikoski
    @MikaKotikoski5 жыл бұрын

    Just an idea regarding further mixing... Once you have matched the kick and bass with the VU against each other as in the vid, how about then cranking up a pink noise generator adjusting its noise level so you can just about hear the kick+bass coming through. After that solo the levels of other tracks against the pink noise... And take it from there. :)

  • @KolicBeatz
    @KolicBeatz8 жыл бұрын

    great useful tip ! thanks for sharing

  • @AightOAightFriends

    @AightOAightFriends

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ach wenn haben wir denn hier :)

  • @AightOAightFriends

    @AightOAightFriends

    4 жыл бұрын

    🦄

  • @matrixate
    @matrixate8 жыл бұрын

    The VUMT is definitely one of the most essential metering plugins I use while mixing. Great vid!

  • @PatricioLaraAinardi
    @PatricioLaraAinardi4 жыл бұрын

    Such a nice trick! makes so much sense, will try it straight away. Was listening one of my mixes today on my earphones, and found exactly that lack. Looking forward to getting it ready to use. Thanks!

  • @AbirTarafdar
    @AbirTarafdar8 жыл бұрын

    Invaluable information. Thanks!

  • @75hilmar
    @75hilmar4 жыл бұрын

    4:33 If you are very impatient

  • @edwinlundgren3456

    @edwinlundgren3456

    3 жыл бұрын

    You think expecting the video to actually start before four and a half minutes in is impatient? xD

  • @bcarr3116
    @bcarr31167 жыл бұрын

    Good trick, thanks so much. Especially when hearing the bottom depends where you mix and whether your ears are fatigued or not. Thanks again B

  • @antoniofretes940
    @antoniofretes9405 жыл бұрын

    I tried it and it really melt the kick and the bass together! Great technique coming from a Grammy Award winner engineer.

  • @fadickinson
    @fadickinson7 жыл бұрын

    So afterwards would you group the bass the kick together so that while mixing the other tracks and need to raise the bass or kick up or down a little they would stay at the same level to each other?

  • @Muzeishen
    @Muzeishen5 жыл бұрын

    I was really confused by the gain boost but I realized that the gain is for both instruments, not just the kick drum, simply to get them to hit the -3 and be relative to one another and hit 0. He didn't mention that the gain boost was for the bass as well, but it's on the mix bus, so it is.

  • @dj_instruments937

    @dj_instruments937

    Жыл бұрын

    But he turned the VU meter back to default. Doesn't that unlevel the kick and bass?

  • @YeahButStilll

    @YeahButStilll

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dj_instruments937 ​ it brings both their gains back to their original levels BUT the faders are now adjusted to keep the ratio of bass to kick equal which is what’s important. So just don’t touch the faders from here on out and when you need to adjust the volume, add or subtract gain equally and you’re good

  • @TheBDD65
    @TheBDD657 жыл бұрын

    I use this every mix to get things started, then adjust from there! Great tip

  • @BunkerAudioPanama
    @BunkerAudioPanama2 жыл бұрын

    Basically, the kick “sums” with bass frequencies it’s in modulation with. This is why many use the side chain to “duck” the initial hit itself for more punch in certain genres. Thanks for sharing your time and knowledge!!

  • @pernormann4869
    @pernormann48694 жыл бұрын

    For me the intuitive place to implement this would be after I've set up my tracks, i.e. EQ, compression on individual tracks. Maybe even after I done some initial EQ:ing etc on my master stereo channel. Is this how you would do it?

  • @catonlsd3
    @catonlsd38 жыл бұрын

    this answers in a way why people use VU meters when mixing.... they balance for average/density levels and control peaks by ear afterwards It's all about getting a sweet density balance with controlled dynamics/peaks, right?

  • @martijnvandongen
    @martijnvandongen4 жыл бұрын

    Really nice trick! I just did the test on a mix I already was finishing up and did the quick check and I had this already in place! Really cool. Next time when I start balancing a song, I will start with this trick. Thank you so much :)

  • @BenFitterman
    @BenFitterman8 жыл бұрын

    This video just answered all the questions I've been asking google all week. THanks!

  • @michaelreaper666
    @michaelreaper6668 жыл бұрын

    That's a good tip Graham ...Thanks :)

  • @topiasleskinen6908
    @topiasleskinen69087 жыл бұрын

    +recordingrevolution Hey Graham, great video, as always. i'd like to know does this trick work with metal mixing? Differences in amount of bass/low end in pop vs metal. Thanks

  • @monsooncity484
    @monsooncity4846 жыл бұрын

    Saw this video last year, never tried it cause I forgot about it. Tried it today on a mix that I've been struggling to get the low end right on, and it seriously helped. I must say though, this is not a bulletproof trick because after doing it I ended up having to make some adjustments to the bass track level. However, it did give me a solid starting point which is all you could really ask for when it comes to mixing & mastering "tricks".

  • @jawadmbadinga252
    @jawadmbadinga2523 жыл бұрын

    Hi Grham im taking my love for recording and mixing more seriously , tis video has seriously helpmeet out a lot . I never even realised that was a thing to do before even mixing . thanks bro and please keep those videos coming bro it has really helped me a lot brother. take care

  • @dutchgamecrew6106
    @dutchgamecrew61067 жыл бұрын

    I would just like to add that when you take 2 sounds together it does not increase the volume by 3 dB per se. It would be an exact increase of 3 dB only when the sounds would be identical. However, the lower your frequencies, the more your sound will become like a sine wave. Therefore, the mixing trick only truly works if the Gain Plugin you are using in this video is only receiving input from the fundamental frequency of both sounds, which would be almost identical as you are receiving only the lower sine wave fundamentals. In practise you won't receive pure sine waves off course, but this will get you closer to a perfect balance if you really want that in your mix. It's more practical to just mix with your ears, especially when you take things like side-chaining into account which nullifies the benefits of this trick. Just my 2 cents.

  • @TheVisitor3

    @TheVisitor3

    2 жыл бұрын

    100%

  • @AmagrasMUSIC
    @AmagrasMUSIC8 жыл бұрын

    Great, now I don't have to use my ears! ;)

  • @danagboyer
    @danagboyer8 жыл бұрын

    That's a really sweet tip, Graham. Thanks. It's nice to have a quantifiable way of getting this balance. Cheers!

  • @nicholasblack7613
    @nicholasblack76136 жыл бұрын

    This really helped man, l been struggling to get my lowend right l been experimenting with all the tricks l could think of and l still could not get it right, this is the solution!!

  • @AntKneeLeafEllipse
    @AntKneeLeafEllipse4 жыл бұрын

    And this is before processing, yeah? I imagine after you get a balance, you volume control as you EQ and compress but I figured I'd better ask!

  • @unlockyoursound
    @unlockyoursound8 жыл бұрын

    Logic Pro has Multimeter for RMS metering.

  • @FreshMusicGroup
    @FreshMusicGroup8 жыл бұрын

    I have mixed very similar to this for years and I can say, this practice, especially in rap (hip-hop & trap) works very well. The only difference is that your kick and bass or 808 will sit a little different when you mix the rest of the music and vocals in. But great technique.

  • @hiphopalx
    @hiphopalx6 жыл бұрын

    I watched this before. Now I have got the VU-meter from Waves and I come back again to check it out again! Its a good and informative video!

  • @ZakiWasik
    @ZakiWasik7 жыл бұрын

    Interesting trick. I'll give it a shot, but there is something that weirds me out a bit: Would it not yield exactly the same result if you just put the meter on the master bus, then adjusted the bass (soloed) to -3dB and then did exactly the same for the bass guitar (soloed). Also, how about songs where the bass does not necessarily play on the downbeat? Say you have a old-school disco groove with the bass drum on all four and the bass playing off-beat? Or maybe the point of doing it this way is that if the bass plays off beat it needs to be louder? And finally, it's kind of a prescriptive trick. It may work for some situations, but I'm sure there are many mixes where it will not. But honestly, I always struggle to find the right levels for the BD and the bass, so I'll try it out - it might be a good starting point. I also like the approach of planning a bit ahead in terms of how to leverage headroom on the master bus.

  • @jamjar142

    @jamjar142

    5 жыл бұрын

    Mattafact Unless you use a SIP, (solo in place) which good analogue desks have, but not many DAWs do.

  • @lilp4pii310

    @lilp4pii310

    3 жыл бұрын

    Would this be valid for having a sub-bass and bass Guitar?

  • @KillerUgly

    @KillerUgly

    3 жыл бұрын

    I just tried it for 3 different songs. it was really helpful for one, didn't accomplish much with another, and resulted in the third having no kick drum. and I listened to all of them in different situations, not just at my desk. I think it's one of those things that's song dependant.

  • @KSchultz98

    @KSchultz98

    2 жыл бұрын

    U know, u don't have to say old school disco bc disco for itself is old school 🤭

  • @ralphverdult
    @ralphverdult8 жыл бұрын

    It's a very good way to balance your kick and bass to each other, but I don't see how it's going to help balance the rest of the mix with the low-end if you remove the reference (which is the meter). If you would say that, for example (!), your whole mix would be around +6dbVU, your low-end elements should be around 0dbVU, it would've made sense.

  • @KreapOfficial

    @KreapOfficial

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Ralph Verdult once the kick and bass are summed you can move them on one fader to fiddle with your mix. balancing them is the key to getting a foundation but not the final level of the kick and bass. this is about locking in a balance between the two. it works.

  • @didasteez

    @didasteez

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Kreap Mcgee great tip!👍👍👍

  • @mattduncan5500

    @mattduncan5500

    7 жыл бұрын

    If its a starting point , would you not start with that as your level in the mixing stage. and then do the rest by ear . ok this needs to be louder then the bass, and this needs to sit under etc etc ??? im actually asking to, not being a Keyboard warrior

  • @moonhowler667

    @moonhowler667

    7 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't work because he's playing with the gain in the meter so it's not an accurate reading.

  • @keinnamemusic4161

    @keinnamemusic4161

    6 жыл бұрын

    Create a group with all your faders. Once you made a good balance around your kick and bass, loop the loudest part of your song and turn all the faders up at the same time till your hitting that -6 db

  • @AzeveidoMateus
    @AzeveidoMateus4 жыл бұрын

    This trick has helped me out so much, thank you.

  • @danielrhoads8676
    @danielrhoads86765 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for creating this video. I watched the interview and i would have not understood this amazing concept without your interpretation showing us how it works. In the interview what he explains would have glazed right over my knowledge, wishing i could understand. This video is awesome! as well as the interview.

  • @BirdYoumans
    @BirdYoumans5 жыл бұрын

    Yes, 3 db does equal double energy, but that does not necessarily sound good though sometimes we might get lucky. It's not a matter of being equal, it's what sounds good. If you can find a picture of the board at the old downstairs studio at the early Motown studio, you will see that they painted over the meters. Why? They LISTENED to the mix and that sounded much better than reasoning out the mix. But of course, what ever works for us is how we do it. I just prefer to listen rather than look, though I suppose to some extent I do both, but I listen much more than look. When you "equaled" the two in your mix, the kick was in your face and the bass sounded like an after thought, though admittedly I'm not listening on my studio monitors and I'm sure that would make quite a difference, so take my thought with a grain of salt. I'm not being critical, just pointing out I suppose that we all hear differently. But then, that's the beauty of art. We all prefer different things anyway. The reason I built my own studio was so I could do it just like I wanted it without having to listen to the "big boys" tell me It won't work that way lol! They also told Shania and Toby they couldn't write, and we know how that worked out. For me, the bass and drums are the foundation of my mix so I spend a bit of time marrying them not only sound wise but in how they play together. That's everything - how they play and compliment each other. How they then sound is a bonus. But you are correct in that technically, energy wise, they would be approximately equal with this method if that's what you want. On second thought, for those just starting out there is indeed a lot to learn and I suppose this would after all be a good place to start. Mixing is an art that takes a lot of practice. Years. At 73 I still watch a lot of how to vids just in case there is something I haven't tried yet, and there usually is lol! We will never learn all there is to know about spirituality or about music. Thus it's a life long journey. A wonderful one!!!

  • @tuxievous420
    @tuxievous4204 жыл бұрын

    Anyone here 2019 cx

  • @alanhoward4082

    @alanhoward4082

    4 жыл бұрын

    no

  • @tuxievous420

    @tuxievous420

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes you are no fibbing plees c:

  • @brunofelixmusic

    @brunofelixmusic

    4 жыл бұрын

    2020

  • @DJURBANBG

    @DJURBANBG

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@brunofelixmusic 2021 !

  • @towerhousemedia361
    @towerhousemedia3614 жыл бұрын

    whoahh thats amazing.. comments cleared up some doubts as well.. this is extremely useful

  • @mikevallejo8666
    @mikevallejo86668 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!!! Saw your interview with Jacquire and I was hoping you would explain it! Great work!

  • @thatsjadon4230
    @thatsjadon42304 жыл бұрын

    Do you use this trick before or after eq and compression?

  • @rossco78

    @rossco78

    4 жыл бұрын

    Jadon Adoko Generally before, especially if the audio is going into an analogue emulated eq or compression plugin as they are generally suited for audio to hit them around -18dbfs. However, you could also do it post eq/compression - as part of the gain staging process to ensure the signal is still at the optimal level. Remember, if you use samples, many have already been eq’d and compressed so unless you are after a certain sound then there is mostly no need to do more. The easiest way to check is to look at the waveform. Google is your friend! I hope this helps.

  • @Mantiz
    @Mantiz8 жыл бұрын

    I'm definitely gonna try it out, but my question is about using this mixing trick when I use a sidechain method for my kick and bass. Should I balance my kick and bass first before I sidechain, or sidechain and then balance with the VU meter?

  • @jux2010

    @jux2010

    8 жыл бұрын

    that's a great question

  • @Mantiz

    @Mantiz

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Dominick Fenwick word. I mean after hearing how loud the mixes are today, I discovered how to use sidechain compression as a means to get what I'm looking for but I'm not always mixing in a space where I'm certain of the low end. I just know my kick won't get drowned out.

  • @jux2010

    @jux2010

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Mantiz I have the same situation I know how to side chain I do it all the time with my 808's and kicks bass and kicks vocals and instruments bit I'm never certain of how my low end is sittin u heard... I got good monitors but sometimes I over do the bass bcuz I don't rock with a sub

  • @jux2010

    @jux2010

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Mantiz I over compensate

  • @Mantiz

    @Mantiz

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Dominick Fenwick EXACTLY!!! My nigga.

  • @DanielZini
    @DanielZini7 жыл бұрын

    This was the final issue in my music. All was sounding great except for the bottom frequencies. I couldn't trust my monitoring system, and referencing with other songs wasn't working either. I just can't thank you enough! One day I may have a decent monitoring system of course, but, for now, that made the trick! Thank you again!

  • @finkleterry2137
    @finkleterry21377 жыл бұрын

    i learned that in school pn a really old Neve VR :) thanks for the refresher on VU meters.. been a long while since Ive used one

  • @mrbrubbs10
    @mrbrubbs104 жыл бұрын

    One question I always wanted to ask...do you do this before you have eq'd the instruments or after? Might be a dumb question but I was just wondering

  • @SuperSonicSauce

    @SuperSonicSauce

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's the smartest question in the whole comment section, and we need answers! I've noticed if i high-pass the kick after the VU trick, i get a spike in RMS but it sounds cleaner and that seems to work, my pro friend that works for a label for 15y+ in the same room with the same speaker set never mixes anything together until he's satisfied with how everything sounds SOLO, and just like magic it sounds cleaner than my mixes without the VU meter thing.

  • @marlongouveiar

    @marlongouveiar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@SuperSonicSauce IMO Volume matching is usually the last thing you do, what you want to do first is to create space in the mix, eq without changing the character of the sounds and add panning(it will sound a lot cleaner)... if you do that right you will have a good pre-mix, after that, you might want to make your sounds hyper-realistic (sounding bigger than what they are in reality with a compression bus, more eq, a reverb bus, overdrive, anything you want really... depending on the genre, you will know what needs to sound further or closer, louder or quieter, don't overthink volume matching it is an easy task to do after you've done everything else right. Also, beware of your sound output hardware, headphones are good for insight details of sound, speakers are in general better for mixing, but you have to have good fidelity ones and a well-treated room to not mistake your ears, remember, your speakers are your ears. Good luck.

  • @SuperSonicSauce

    @SuperSonicSauce

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@marlongouveiar Thanks man, that was really helpful, cheers!

  • @nyikomhlarhimusic

    @nyikomhlarhimusic

    3 жыл бұрын

    1. I balance the bass and kick to get a provisional low end balance. 2. Then add other instruments relative to the provisional balance. Add effects as I wish, even in the bass and kick channels (I know it will change the initial balance) 3. When I'm done mixing the whole song, I then go back and do a final low end balance, also group the bass and kick. Now I adjust the volume of the group till the volume/level of low end matches the entire mix. Hope it helps. Stay blessed, stay safe and enjoying mixing 😃✌🏿

  • @lordgrill252
    @lordgrill2528 жыл бұрын

    ZEEro on this VU meter :D

  • @electropocalypse5877
    @electropocalypse5877 Жыл бұрын

    This was extremely helpful I noticed that in my first song so far... taking forever lol... the kick sounds louder with other instruments than it does solo. It also seems to take on the pitch of other instruments as well. Perhaps tuning and adjusting (many more) volume knobs will do the trick. This is all very cumbersome with lack of practice but your videos really explain things well. Thanks for that. 🙂

  • @mimidhof2179
    @mimidhof21797 жыл бұрын

    Great share, I bought it right away... I would personaly ad that this is also the cheapest stereo expander you can find anywhere used in M/S mode... balancing mid and side part of the mix... Wonderfull.

  • @matrixate
    @matrixate7 жыл бұрын

    This is pretty specific for some songs with drum and bass. Still, this is simply another technique to add to the list. Like others' have said...just use your ears then balance out. Thanks for sharing with us.

  • @Yobott

    @Yobott

    7 жыл бұрын

    its pretty handy to have a reference point

  • @Faction24NYC
    @Faction24NYC6 жыл бұрын

    Some of you guys commenting shouldn't be mixing if you're asking these questions. First of all don't come at graham as he is sharing a trick showed to him by a Grammy award winning engineer. Secondly, if you don't know to set the output of whatever processor you're using to reflect the original level so there isn't any unnecessary gain, you need to go back to school, or STFU! with the negative comments. Further more, for the genre questions, YES,YES, and YES, i can guarantee if you're saying it didn't work you did something wrong. Be respectful, Be grateful you're learning something for free, and get back to work. If you're working in pro tools, once you have the balance, simply select the kick and bass tracks CRTL+G name the Group "KICKBASS", and then mix from there.

  • @kensley94

    @kensley94

    5 жыл бұрын

    Or you can stop being cocky :)

  • @jamjar142

    @jamjar142

    5 жыл бұрын

    All this is just BS anyway, I subscribe to the Dave Pensado school of thought, if someone tells you that this is the way to do it and is the right way to do it, don't listen to them as if it were gospel, just take it as advice and try your own way of doping things, that way you learn much more about how things work and how to do things. The key word is EXPERIMENT,.

  • @hearmenow909

    @hearmenow909

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@kensley94 Your 'trying to be clever' like ratio needs more work.

  • @TheMixClub
    @TheMixClub8 жыл бұрын

    Nice trick will give it a try. I mix so much by feel and not always keeping track of levels like I should but I'm 50 and old habits are hard to break. Something I liked when you brought the mix in was you bass and drums are smooth. I have been a FOH for over 30+ years and recording for 20+ and I always find my studio mixes have so much lows because thats what the bands I mix live need and want. But when i listen to your mix its a reality check that I need to lose some of the junk in the trunk LOL. I still think we should mix with our ears but this might break me of some old habits in the studio. For me placement is key to a good mix so i get what you are saying. Enjoy your vids. I have dyslexia so sorry for spelling.

  • @LukeWilliam
    @LukeWilliam8 жыл бұрын

    You really don't know how much this has helped me!

  • @novakattila
    @novakattila7 жыл бұрын

    Heavily depends on the style you're going for. Sounds like you're mixing something like Dire Straits, but this "trick" wont do well with something heavily bass dependent like techno or dub.

  • @phaedruslykos3249

    @phaedruslykos3249

    5 жыл бұрын

    yeah i like my dubplate needles scratching and stopping and starting in the club :P Needs all the hertz

  • @daniellara1215
    @daniellara12158 жыл бұрын

    You should do a how to mix hip hop video.

  • @ROOKTABULA

    @ROOKTABULA

    5 жыл бұрын

    No.

  • @ryanreiss1172
    @ryanreiss11724 жыл бұрын

    Incredibly useful tool to get balances set. Thanks for sharing, Graham

  • @HazzCraft
    @HazzCraft4 жыл бұрын

    Ok i master my own music and the other month by ear i nailed the bass volumes. I just went and checked with a vu meter and turns out id unintentionally done exactly this just .5 higher. This is awesome will be using this

  • @Lmoes
    @Lmoes8 жыл бұрын

    Did you learn this from Jacquire?

  • @225maine

    @225maine

    5 жыл бұрын

    Ummm that's what he said in the video! Wtf!?

  • @Misdom
    @Misdom7 жыл бұрын

    Do these same tactics work when mixing Trap style hiphop with heavy bass/subs, or is this balance technicque genre specific? I hate watching tutorials that are never mixing the music that's relevant in the leading music today. You go to your DAW and do what you see on youtube and it makes you sound terrible compared to the successful pros in your genre.

  • @thecyrilcril

    @thecyrilcril

    5 жыл бұрын

    Tried it on pop, it works for me. "leading music today" is so relative, what mainstream gatekeepers promote don't necessarily lead. sorry for ranting BTW I am an hiphop guy but I listen and mix other genres

  • @kriscody3577
    @kriscody35777 жыл бұрын

    I'm gonna use that tip. I've always gravitated to balancing the bass and kick followed by automating the lead vocal and start building around those three.

  • @djflx3313
    @djflx33134 жыл бұрын

    Great tip. I watched this video a couple of years ago. Now I have downloaded the mvMeter2 (TB Pro Audio) and eager to try it out on my next mix :D Thank you, Graham. // DJFLX

  • @snapascrew
    @snapascrew8 жыл бұрын

    sounds like a whole lot of mixing with your eyes

  • @TheMattd546

    @TheMattd546

    8 жыл бұрын

    +snapascrew When it comes to volume you need to mix with your eyes otherwise you might clip the master. When you eq you should do it without your eyes though.

  • @fernandoizu

    @fernandoizu

    8 жыл бұрын

    +snapascrew well yeah, but as he says at the begining of the video, it`s meant to be used in situations where you can`t depend on your ears to accurately measure the low end balance (like if you are in an unfamiliar environment)

  • @akasickform

    @akasickform

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think it looks like a logical and simple starting block. I'm definitely going to be trying this out, and take it from there.

  • @moonhowler667

    @moonhowler667

    7 жыл бұрын

    It even says in my DAW manual, "Mix with your ears not your eyes" xD

  • @cperception

    @cperception

    7 жыл бұрын

    even if you clip the master. it doesnt mean that is "wrong". u have to concentrate on your ears not eyes. if you see clipping, but the sound is still good, than go with it.

  • @peterfarr9591
    @peterfarr95917 жыл бұрын

    Better to just use your ears in a treated space. Personally I think going off of numbers is a bad approach to mixing but to each their own I suppose. Also, something to think about is let's say you sidechain the bass to the kick so they don't fight, well, now their summative volume won't be the same, so this "trick" falls apart pretty quickly. Likewise if you sidechain dynamic eq'd the bass to the kick so the lows duck with a low shelf when the kick hits.

  • @martriobr

    @martriobr

    5 жыл бұрын

    Hi,very good way of balance the low friendly frequencies

  • @wapanglemdur

    @wapanglemdur

    3 жыл бұрын

    If you have a well treated room and have mastered your hearing ability why the fuck are you here.... This video is for struggling ones who needs something to beat the odds

  • @grahamhughes2025
    @grahamhughes20252 жыл бұрын

    on a journey with this ...around understanding gain staging...and have the latest version of that meter......this was helpful....hadnt thought of adjusting trim...many thanks.

  • @mcohen9219
    @mcohen92197 жыл бұрын

    Great trick! I love Recording Revolution! Graham - you rock!

  • @colinmurphy3478
    @colinmurphy34788 жыл бұрын

    Yet the bass is still too low compared to the kick. :/

  • @davidnika446

    @davidnika446

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Colin Anthony I agree. But this still looks like a good way to start a mix. I would probably just pick -4dB or -5dB for the kick as a starting point, instead of -3dB, and keep 0dB as my target for the "kick+bass" level.

  • @ebernakamuragomes1134

    @ebernakamuragomes1134

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Colin Anthony perhaps too much sub frequency on the bass..

  • @TheRealKiFFTv

    @TheRealKiFFTv

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Eber Nakamura Gomes and not enough distortion or harmonics to hear it too as well @colin

  • @Spoolz07

    @Spoolz07

    8 жыл бұрын

    If you introduced some compression on the bass channel and *then* matched it with the kick like he did in the video, that would make it sound punchier (in my opinion) and take account of the variation in playing volume during the track. If in doubt, just do it like Motorhead used to - Everything Louder Than Everyone Else :)

  • @xradical89x

    @xradical89x

    8 жыл бұрын

    I guess you could probably bring down the kick a bit, leaving more room for the bass and turn it up a bit, and kinda balance the two so that the bass would add more lows to the overall levels... so the kick would probably not be at -3 but around -4 maybe smth like that.

  • @donnalisajenkins
    @donnalisajenkins4 жыл бұрын

    yall take so long to explain something. got damn run on sentences. but good work man!💯

  • @IndustryInstrumentals
    @IndustryInstrumentals7 жыл бұрын

    good tip for applying to kick 808 hip hope mixes too. mix low end in this way, then bring in rest of kit except snare, set levels, then bring in band, set levels, then snare levels. another great vid graham cheers

  • @vitor_portela
    @vitor_portela5 жыл бұрын

    I was not going to say anything, but after trying this i had to come back to the video to say THANKS!!! really useful information!

  • @tellermotion
    @tellermotion8 жыл бұрын

    how about using your ears? I mean its a trick good to know, but it will not improve your skills

  • @Versus61

    @Versus61

    8 жыл бұрын

    He has a point, some rooms are really bad for mixing low frenquencies. also a lot of homestudios only have small 5" or 6" monitors. its basically a trick to doublecheck your ears in those environments.

  • @tellermotion

    @tellermotion

    8 жыл бұрын

    ok. you are right, that is a point! cheers!

  • @thesoundthatbangs3429

    @thesoundthatbangs3429

    8 жыл бұрын

    Yup. Definitely use your ears - but even in my work in a good studio with high end monitoring... and good start point is worthwhile. Mixes change depending upon mood - if you set up a standardised point of reference then you can "have a good reason" to move away from it.

  • @TheFissnoc

    @TheFissnoc

    8 жыл бұрын

    As a poor home recording hobbyist with only a couple pairs of headphones, the only thing I got is tricks. I can play guitar and bass but this whole mixing thing has my head spinning.

  • @TheFissnoc

    @TheFissnoc

    8 жыл бұрын

    ***** Yeah you lost me there

  • @KKMcK1
    @KKMcK17 жыл бұрын

    Yep. This is exactly what we did in the analogue world back in the early 70s. Start with Kick and Bass. Then build the band to that. Match guitar to snare level. Match keys and vocal levels. Then ride the faders accordingly in the mix. Of course, today we can automate, but back then we'd have six hands on the board. Fun stuff! Not to say that I don't LOVE automation today. At the end of 2016, it's really getting fantastic!

  • @jaybyrddoggie
    @jaybyrddoggie8 жыл бұрын

    I really needed this. My last mix was too boomy with bass. Thanks Graham.

  • @jasonstarr6023
    @jasonstarr60238 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I also like the way you do your sub mixing headed into the mix buss. Great organization!

  • @ElectricEelProd
    @ElectricEelProd8 жыл бұрын

    Great tip Graham! I'll use this one on the next mix, very helpful!

  • @coolguydavidvarg
    @coolguydavidvarg8 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the tip Graham, this was awesome. I used the RMS meter that is included with the SLATE FGX Plugin.

  • @1141Studios
    @1141Studios8 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the info. This explanation makes this subject easier to digest. Cheers!

  • @zillaclout
    @zillaclout8 жыл бұрын

    thanks for sharing! about to try now bro. appreciate it....this addresses one of my biggest problems in mixing

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