Honestly, I'm very much over high boost past 10k in vocals. It just doesn't sound natural to me and gets in the way of my high strings, symbols, shakers. One thing that really woke me up and improvement my mixes was hearing Jack Joseph Puig talking about the importance of the mid-range, and he specifically said for 600hz-4khz, because that's where the true heart and cry of a lot of instruments are. I also took Mix With The Masters and saw Chris Lord Alge do a lot of 2k and 4k boosts. Only 1db-3db, but they make a big difference. I usually do these kind of moves and little clearing up with low mids going into my compressors. Then after the compressors, I do like putting on a little saturation, but I usually end the chain with another Pro EQ 3. I don't boost or cut, but will put dynamic EQ bells between around 2k-7k, just to keep control of those harsh frequencies, incase they get too abrasive. I also often put another dynamic EQ bell between 200-500 just to control any mud. But I set the range on the dynamic EQ's to a maximum of 1.5db - that's all I need. Hope this helps some people. I find mixing vocals so so so much easy now with this mind set. I just don't boost above 10k on vocals any more, unless they recorded on a really awful mic! And obviously, there are exceptions. If the singer naturally has a lot of harsh 4k, it better to leave it or cut a few db. Trust your ears.
My grandfather would come home after a live opera or orchestral concert excited about what he had heard and later might buy a recording of same, either recorded in studio by other musicians or, sometimes, a live recording of the concert he had attended or of another live concert and listen to them on his 78 rpm disc and be just as excited and enjoyed listening to those thin and often scratchy sounds. In other words, excellent compositions survive.
Your whistle technique is gonna become a standard for teaching how to work that area.. well, whatever the users whistle range is. You mentioned it in a previous video & I've been using it while running live sound & its been an absolute game changer. Both for source resonances & feedback.
Back in 1990 myy dad bought me a 4 track 8 was 12 he gave me a distortion pedal a toy casio keyboard a microphone, a little fx pricessor and a fisher graphic eq he said use the eq on everything Later i got a kenwood stereo that had a spectrum analizer and since i was running my studio through it i discovered how to copy guitar sounds with a distortion pedal plugged to the eq how to eq snares toms kicks everythis from a graphic eq now i can gear frequencies on demand when listening to music thanks dad rip
I think associating frequencies with sounds one can easily make with their own body is a good method. For instance, thumping on my chest with my fist produces subs, and various types of clapping my hands, and snapping my fingers produce pretty consistent frequencies.
I learned to pinpoint frequencies by ear decades ago but now as I‘m growing older it shifts. What used to sound like 8k now is really 5k. That sucks big time.
Wow, what an incredible and unique video, thanks for taking the time to put it all together and share your knowledge, top man! Subbed straight away.....well done! 😃
My rooster from being an audio file and selling Hi-Fi from the early '70s to the early '80s. And then at the turn of the century learning the base and vocals and being in a lot of bands. And now here I am at age 70 telling the lady at the hearing aid place that my hearing aids have a peek at about 800 Hertz. And she does a test, and it is pretty close to that. You get a feel for it after a while.
This has already helped me immensely in mixing some of my songs. I had too much 200 Hz too often. It's because I like that frequency quite a bit, so I choose backing tracks and record my music with a similarly "low heavy" sound. Especially with my Schecter 7 string tuned to drop A. With your help, I was able to just slightly tweak the 200 region down for a few tracks. I also dropped the mix for about 80 Hz on a few tracks. They were stacking at those frequencies on spikes. Not all the time, just in certain areas. By adjusting the eq for those regions, I was able to keep the overall track volume similar, but reduce the impact of a frequency spike. Some UA-cam videos have clickbait titles. Your video is not one of them. I now hear things differently, and I'm just getting started with your method here. I have a feeling there is a lot I can learn about this. Thank you so much for the education! You have a new fan! Stay awesome.
Stopped by to give a like and i cant really listen to the video was driving home and the low end cant register with phone speakers LOL but will watch again when i do get to the home studio that has by far better speakers but keep up the great video work! And i hope everyone is doing well too! And keep being rocking awesome everyone! 🙏🎶🤟😎👍🎸🎵😀
This is just like what musicians do with intervals. We relate intervals with different vibes or actual tunes. Like a 5th is Star Wars. Octave is somewhere over the rainbow. That kind of thing. Then you get used to them and feel them intuitively instead.
nice video man, love how you emphasize, for sure for the presence to high range, that it's all to it's context and situation, this is very valuable info for those starting with the music production process, lots of tuto's on youtube that only say presence to high range fequencies and resonances bad and you need to cut all of them
@@audioedges yha I didn't realized the whistling frequency area we can do with our mouths its such a relatively small range, then it suddenly makes it really realistic just by practicing to nail resonances in 1k steps there without perfect pitch or anything. Its just a practical thing like this. Pretty huge actually. Ill try to learn this and spread your word, really, thanks (: Becoming the human soothe2 :D
I like your Frequency Association idea. I think I have done similar exercises over the years. Have you made any videos specifically about mixing a full orchestra?
loved this demonstration, a little ask however. could you please write in the freq ranges in the chapter markers, i think it could be a huge help for viewers while watching. either way great vid!
Just off the top of my head, a lawn mower in my mind has a similar fundamental as a muffled club, so I'd assume it's woofy at 200hz -300hz, I noticed I don't hear bass in my headphones so well when I am mowing my lawn too.
First life forms were of molecular size and might have been interacting with molecule size elements around them. For example sensing air molecules hitting them or photons causing some damage. These sensing behavior later developed into larger systems and systematic sensations.. Just my thought
One thing he didn’t mention is as a sound engineer that has working with head singers and they sound like there singing through there noise. That’s all in the 150-400.
7:49 - "This is what I like to describe as Honky-ness"? Me: Wait...what? 7:56 - "You're gonna hear it as kind of a honking sound." Me: Ohhhh, HonkING-ness. 😂😂
Just went downstairs and turned 4K all the way down on my mother's phone so now the Christmas movies do not bite the ceiling anymore. Thanks 4KMillion!!!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤😅
Thanks, you have just ruined listening to music for me! 🤣 Seriously though, I wish I had these tips when I used to set up PAs and sound out rooms. Great video 👍
Wow nice, this is really helpful to understand how the frequencys Sounds like. When I recorded clarinet, I had a lot oft Air in the tone and lower from 3k everything down, the Noise was away. But I am a Little Bit afraid, that I cut the overtones of the clarinet away.
Nice job awesome video I think your breathy area is described better with sizzle and associate it with like a stick of dynamite wick being lit . Or bacon in a frying pan Most people doing videos drive me nuts because they say um, constantly, dude I don't think you said it once. I love the pro Q3 although I bought the Kirchoff last year thats pretty nice too I think it's a little more musical than the fab filter. The fab filter multiband compressor is on every one of my Vocal submixes. 99% of the time, I only record vocals and send them off. Another good descriptive word for the upper midrange is harch. Is subscribed and liked
Are there strategies for older folks who want to mix their recordings who have hearing loss above 10-15k? I heard some but know I hear less than my kids.
Alex have you or know a way to work on your mixes when you have bad Tinnitus ringing in the ears, like the test of the emergency broadcast system on top of finger nails scrapping down a blackboard 24/7?
IMO That`s an easy skill to acquire, althought real the mastering can be missleading because of the dynamic elements one has in the track, which may make u think like u need to boost 3k, when u need to lessen the peak at 6k for example
I think of 300hz as talking to an empty plastic can of sour milk. 900hz is the plasticky tone of a vocal I had in a song in 1999 and battled with the EQ to make it less plasticky and piercing in the mix. 4khz is a bicycle bell ringing dinggggggg for me, and the protruding tone is easy to flag somewhere in that area and then think is it lower or higher in tone to get to more exact area. 😅
Also Manley Ref C has a really strong 3.3-3.4khz which has made it easier to spot in other sounds when softening the vocals recorded with RefC. They bite through a mix really well though.
Notes - Frequency Association Low Section 20 Hz- 85 Hz - Sub thump Feel the sound - with out clarity - Meat of the sound Thunder storm - Meat of the sound 40 Hz - 50 Hz - Low rumble Earth Quack - Thunder storm thump 85Hz - 200 Hz - Low Frequency - Bass Frequency Meat of the Bass Guitar - Male baritone vocalist Thump of Snare Drum Full bass and low - Not thumping Mid Range 200 Hz - 400 Hz - Muffled, Woofie, Muddy Mouth Shut Talking sound, Moth closed under water humming sound baritone voice muffled club for distance sound 300h Hz - 400 Hz - Boxy Sound Hitting, Card Bored with the Stick 500 Hz - 900 Hz - Honking Sound Car Horn - Meat of the sound French Horn (500Hz-1K) Goose Honk Telephone 1 Khz -2 Khz - Telephone Talking Sound, Announcement Speaker High Mid - Distance - Little clarity Higher Frequency Presence 2 kHz - 4 kHz - Harsh In Vocal, distorted Electric Guitar, piercing frequency Clarity, Detail Comes out, Piano Sound Scissors - cutting paper - meat of the sound
3 kHz - 4 kHz - Birds whistling sound - higher sound Upper Mid 4 kHz- 8 kHz- Sibilance - Consonants ‘S’ and ‘T’ ‘Tss’ sound Ear Fatigue, pain, piercing, spitty sounds, Beat Boxing, Hi-Hats Also add - Clarity, Snare Drum Crack High 6 kHz - 10 kHz - Sparkle, Brightness, Open up the Mix, Sense of Clarity Deal of the Voice, Mosquitoes Buzz Sparky 10 kHz - 20 kHz - Over All sparkle, Air - Brightness - Shimmer, Modern Rap Vocal, Breathe-Ness of Pop Vocal- mass high boost on the top end hi top Sizzle of Symbols, wispier of Air, Angle Dust
Any serious 'mixer' should get a hearing test to determine how they perceive sound. For example, many people these days have various degrees of high frequency loss which would/should have to be factored into their mixing. Of course it may be that so many mixing engineers have these deficits that it has become the 'norm' commercially.
Download the Home Mixing Cheatsheet here 👉 www.audioedges.com/homemixingcheatsheet
And don't forget to SUBSCRIBE for more! :)
I doubt that electric guitar you played was anywhere near 20 Hz.
This is stupid to listen to on my phone!
Bye. Not listenin' to the rest.
Started as Click Bait. Ended as Master Class
20hz is what i like to call waiting in line outside the concert to get in
To me it would be 120hz 😂
Basically silence ?
@@BEEFBRSKT you may not be able to hear it. What are you listening to the video on?
Among all my teachers and classes, no one gave us this example of how boxiness or muddiness sounds. This is EXCELLENT
Glad to hear that! Thanks!
Absolutely incredible tutorial man. Love the comparison to the thunderstorm, really puts things into perspective. Also nice song choice 👀
@@LukeProvMusic Appreciate you man! Everyone should check out your music!!
Honestly, I'm very much over high boost past 10k in vocals. It just doesn't sound natural to me and gets in the way of my high strings, symbols, shakers. One thing that really woke me up and improvement my mixes was hearing Jack Joseph Puig talking about the importance of the mid-range, and he specifically said for 600hz-4khz, because that's where the true heart and cry of a lot of instruments are. I also took Mix With The Masters and saw Chris Lord Alge do a lot of 2k and 4k boosts. Only 1db-3db, but they make a big difference. I usually do these kind of moves and little clearing up with low mids going into my compressors. Then after the compressors, I do like putting on a little saturation, but I usually end the chain with another Pro EQ 3. I don't boost or cut, but will put dynamic EQ bells between around 2k-7k, just to keep control of those harsh frequencies, incase they get too abrasive. I also often put another dynamic EQ bell between 200-500 just to control any mud. But I set the range on the dynamic EQ's to a maximum of 1.5db - that's all I need. Hope this helps some people. I find mixing vocals so so so much easy now with this mind set. I just don't boost above 10k on vocals any more, unless they recorded on a really awful mic! And obviously, there are exceptions. If the singer naturally has a lot of harsh 4k, it better to leave it or cut a few db. Trust your ears.
Great advice! The magic is in the midrange…
My grandfather would come home after a live opera or orchestral concert excited about what he had heard and later might buy a recording of same, either recorded in studio by other musicians or, sometimes, a live recording of the concert he had attended or of another live concert and listen to them on his 78 rpm disc and be just as excited and enjoyed listening to those thin and often scratchy sounds. In other words, excellent compositions survive.
Your whistle technique is gonna become a standard for teaching how to work that area.. well, whatever the users whistle range is. You mentioned it in a previous video & I've been using it while running live sound & its been an absolute game changer. Both for source resonances & feedback.
Thank you! That's awesome to hear it's working so well for you too! Appreciate your comment! :)
First tutorial I've seen in ages that is actually useful. Just a great way to listen to sound and identity. Kudos on the presentation as well!
Thank you! Appreciate this!
Alex! How am I just discovering this channel now! Great video! I will be watching many more. Keep it up. 🤘
Thanks so much man! Appreciate it!
Thanks dude! The whistling trick is priceless.. I feel like that tip alone can move mountains
Thanks! So glad it’s working for everyone! I’d been doing it instinctually for years and realized I should share it! Appreciate that.
When you do a lot of messing around with third octave graphic equalizers as well as parametric equalizers you get a feel for all this stuff.
Back in 1990 myy dad bought me a 4 track 8 was 12 he gave me a distortion pedal a toy casio keyboard a microphone, a little fx pricessor and a fisher graphic eq he said use the eq on everything
Later i got a kenwood stereo that had a spectrum analizer and since i was running my studio through it i discovered how to copy guitar sounds with a distortion pedal plugged to the eq how to eq snares toms kicks everythis from a graphic eq now i can gear frequencies on demand when listening to music thanks dad rip
I think associating frequencies with sounds one can easily make with their own body is a good method. For instance, thumping on my chest with my fist produces subs, and various types of clapping my hands, and snapping my fingers produce pretty consistent frequencies.
I saw your original video discussing frequencies, but it was just as interesting (and useful) this time round. Great job, thank you.
Thanks very much! Glad it's helpful!
I learned to pinpoint frequencies by ear decades ago but now as I‘m growing older it shifts. What used to sound like 8k now is really 5k. That sucks big time.
This happens to people with Perfect Pitch… somewhere around 55yrs old, their hearing detunes by about one semitone
@ I know and it drives them nuts. But I‘m not sure if this is the same issue.
This is the most useful listening tutorial on the internet. ❤
So glad to hear that, thanks!
Wow, what an incredible and unique video, thanks for taking the time to put it all together and share your knowledge, top man! Subbed straight away.....well done! 😃
Thanks for the comment! Appreciate it and welcome to the channel :)
Wow, this has been so helpful… thank you! I’m gonna look for a video you might have about compression.
This video has the best explanations for Frequencies I've seen!. Thank you!!!
Thank you! Glad you found it helpful :)
My rooster from being an audio file and selling Hi-Fi from the early '70s to the early '80s. And then at the turn of the century learning the base and vocals and being in a lot of bands. And now here I am at age 70 telling the lady at the hearing aid place that my hearing aids have a peek at about 800 Hertz. And she does a test, and it is pretty close to that. You get a feel for it after a while.
This is a good video for engineers and creative enthusiasts of all ages and levels of experience. I wish this was around when I was starting out!
Thank you!!
22:50 I did hear a cymbal above 10kHz mostly with my left ear with my hearing aids on. I have a hearing disability since I was born.
As an Audiophile of many years, this was useful to help diagnose problems in my system & rectifying with eq. Thanks!
Glad to hear that! That’s great!
This has already helped me immensely in mixing some of my songs. I had too much 200 Hz too often. It's because I like that frequency quite a bit, so I choose backing tracks and record my music with a similarly "low heavy" sound. Especially with my Schecter 7 string tuned to drop A. With your help, I was able to just slightly tweak the 200 region down for a few tracks. I also dropped the mix for about 80 Hz on a few tracks. They were stacking at those frequencies on spikes. Not all the time, just in certain areas. By adjusting the eq for those regions, I was able to keep the overall track volume similar, but reduce the impact of a frequency spike. Some UA-cam videos have clickbait titles. Your video is not one of them. I now hear things differently, and I'm just getting started with your method here. I have a feeling there is a lot I can learn about this. Thank you so much for the education! You have a new fan! Stay awesome.
Stopped by to give a like and i cant really listen to the video was driving home and the low end cant register with phone speakers LOL but will watch again when i do get to the home studio that has by far better speakers but keep up the great video work! And i hope everyone is doing well too! And keep being rocking awesome everyone! 🙏🎶🤟😎👍🎸🎵😀
That 85 to 200 range is the sound I hear coming from my neighbours house at 4am 😂
Haha!
Excellent tutorial! Now to record the dog’s bark and learn what frequency it is that feels like a knife stabbing me in the ear.
Saved for when I can use my earphones. Cheers.
Awesome, see you soon then! :)
Highly recommend this video 💯
Thank You AMAZING CONTENT
Thank you! :)
Great system! And a quick way to teach junior engineers or explain to talent / clients what you’re doing!
This is just like what musicians do with intervals. We relate intervals with different vibes or actual tunes. Like a 5th is Star Wars. Octave is somewhere over the rainbow. That kind of thing. Then you get used to them and feel them intuitively instead.
Cool way to think of it! Yeah, exactly - just association for frequency ranges this time!
My Bonnie is a 6th
I learned these passively because of the DJs at the clubs in the early 2000s filtering the builds 😂
That'll do it!! Haha
nice video man, love how you emphasize, for sure for the presence to high range, that it's all to it's context and situation, this is very valuable info for those starting with the music production process, lots of tuto's on youtube that only say presence to high range fequencies and resonances bad and you need to cut all of them
Thanks man! Lots of misconceptions out there for sure. It’s terrible actually, haha. Glad this has been helpful!
@@audioedges keep up the work man! I'm sharing ;)
Fantastic tips, thank you very much!
I’m happy to hear that! Thanks!
Very useful! Great video, man.
@@CharfishDesign thank you! Happy it’s helping.
Hey , thanks for a great video . Informative and engaging .
“ Be aware of our surroundings “ 🤘
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks!
Duuude!!! Fantastic!!! Will record my whistle soon, this is gold!
Finally, some one using a song example with real instruments rather than canned hip hop beats/bass.
@0:22 the way you said “withaoot” has me thinking you are a fellow Canadian = I know the truth 😂
Yep haha!
Thats actually pretty smart with the whistling :D Noice video
Thank you! Glad you liked it!
@@audioedges yha I didn't realized the whistling frequency area we can do with our mouths its such a relatively small range, then it suddenly makes it really realistic just by practicing to nail resonances in 1k steps there without perfect pitch or anything. Its just a practical thing like this. Pretty huge actually. Ill try to learn this and spread your word, really, thanks (:
Becoming the human soothe2 :D
I like your Frequency Association idea. I think I have done similar exercises over the years. Have you made any videos specifically about mixing a full orchestra?
hey good tips man
Thanks for sharing!
Happy to help! It’s what this channel’s for :)
Great video 💥
Thank you!
Excellent tutorial
Thanks!
Very interesting . Thank you. One of the first videos of 25 minutes that is not boring! It past before I realized it.
Thank you! Glad to hear that.
Thanks this was really… ear opening
loved this demonstration, a little ask however. could you please write in the freq ranges in the chapter markers, i think it could be a huge help for viewers while watching. either way great vid!
Just off the top of my head, a lawn mower in my mind has a similar fundamental as a muffled club, so I'd assume it's woofy at 200hz -300hz, I noticed I don't hear bass in my headphones so well when I am mowing my lawn too.
Thank you for sharing this what a great video! Just subscribed
Awesome! Glad to hear that! Welcome to the channel.
Love it! This is great TY TY THis will boost us up to some produver level hearing!!
First life forms were of molecular size and might have been interacting with molecule size elements around them. For example sensing air molecules hitting them or photons causing some damage. These sensing behavior later developed into larger systems and systematic sensations.. Just my thought
One thing he didn’t mention is as a sound engineer that has working with head singers and they sound like there singing through there noise. That’s all in the 150-400.
Excellent tutorial. Thank you.
Thanks, glad to hear that!
Outstandingly helpful!
Great great vid. Wish I had this when I started.
If you think of frequencies as notes on a piano from low to high, it's much easier to visualize.
Cool way to visualize it. Lower on the left, higher on the right!
7:49 - "This is what I like to describe as Honky-ness"?
Me: Wait...what?
7:56 - "You're gonna hear it as kind of a honking sound."
Me: Ohhhh, HonkING-ness. 😂😂
Exceptional breakdown !
Thanks Adam!
Just went downstairs and turned 4K all the way down on my mother's phone so now the Christmas movies do not bite the ceiling anymore. Thanks 4KMillion!!!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤😅
Great content. Perfectly explained. That’s a sub from me. Cheers. ✌🏻
Thank you! Welcome aboard :)
This is really helpful thank you
I do similar with the EQ on my PC, years ago my Stereo EQ.
i gotta watch this every day
Thanks, you have just ruined listening to music for me! 🤣 Seriously though, I wish I had these tips when I used to set up PAs and sound out rooms. Great video 👍
Thank You Very Much!
💛🙏
Wow nice, this is really helpful to understand how the frequencys Sounds like. When I recorded clarinet, I had a lot oft Air in the tone and lower from 3k everything down, the Noise was away. But I am a Little Bit afraid, that I cut the overtones of the clarinet away.
awesome video
Thanks!
Great video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I used to have a video game "Guess the tone" on my TI 99/4a
Nice job awesome video I think your breathy area is described better with sizzle and associate it with like a stick of dynamite wick being lit . Or bacon in a frying pan Most people doing videos drive me nuts because they say um, constantly, dude I don't think you said it once. I love the pro Q3 although I bought the Kirchoff last year thats pretty nice too I think it's a little more musical than the fab filter.
The fab filter multiband compressor is on every one of my Vocal submixes. 99% of the time, I only record vocals and send them off. Another good descriptive word for the upper midrange is harch. Is subscribed and liked
6:37 LMFAOOOOOOOO YO😂
Haha, if it works it works! 😅
Cool it with the thumbnail graphics.
Thanks bro🎉🎉🎉
You got it! :)
Are there strategies for older folks who want to mix their recordings who have hearing loss above 10-15k? I heard some but know I hear less than my kids.
I hear frequency ranges as colors
instant sub
Welcome aboard :)
Alex have you or know a way to work on your mixes when you have bad Tinnitus ringing in the ears, like the test of the emergency broadcast system on top of finger nails scrapping down a blackboard 24/7?
IMO That`s an easy skill to acquire, althought real the mastering can be missleading because of the dynamic elements one has in the track, which may make u think like u need to boost 3k, when u need to lessen the peak at 6k for example
Its like when you are under water , you can hear the voice but it's muffled 😂😂😂😂😂
Was going through hell with golden ear trainings 😂😂😂 damn
I think of 300hz as talking to an empty plastic can of sour milk. 900hz is the plasticky tone of a vocal I had in a song in 1999 and battled with the EQ to make it less plasticky and piercing in the mix. 4khz is a bicycle bell ringing dinggggggg for me, and the protruding tone is easy to flag somewhere in that area and then think is it lower or higher in tone to get to more exact area. 😅
Also Manley Ref C has a really strong 3.3-3.4khz which has made it easier to spot in other sounds when softening the vocals recorded with RefC. They bite through a mix really well though.
THE WHISTLE GO WOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!
That it does.
Good info. Thanks. Wow, how big was that mosquito. Ours sound much higher-pitched. :^)
So much meat
Loved the video
Thank you! Glad to hear that 👊
Notes - Frequency Association
Low Section
20 Hz- 85 Hz - Sub thump
Feel the sound - with out clarity - Meat of the sound
Thunder storm - Meat of the sound
40 Hz - 50 Hz - Low rumble
Earth Quack - Thunder storm thump
85Hz - 200 Hz - Low Frequency - Bass Frequency
Meat of the Bass Guitar - Male baritone vocalist
Thump of Snare Drum
Full bass and low - Not thumping
Mid Range
200 Hz - 400 Hz - Muffled, Woofie, Muddy
Mouth Shut Talking sound, Moth closed under water humming sound
baritone voice
muffled club for distance sound
300h Hz - 400 Hz - Boxy Sound
Hitting, Card Bored with the Stick
500 Hz - 900 Hz - Honking Sound
Car Horn - Meat of the sound
French Horn (500Hz-1K)
Goose Honk
Telephone
1 Khz -2 Khz - Telephone Talking Sound, Announcement Speaker
High Mid - Distance - Little clarity
Higher Frequency
Presence
2 kHz - 4 kHz - Harsh In Vocal, distorted Electric Guitar, piercing frequency
Clarity, Detail Comes out, Piano Sound
Scissors - cutting paper - meat of the sound
3 kHz - 4 kHz - Birds whistling sound - higher sound
Upper Mid
4 kHz- 8 kHz- Sibilance - Consonants ‘S’ and ‘T’ ‘Tss’ sound
Ear Fatigue, pain, piercing, spitty sounds, Beat Boxing, Hi-Hats
Also add - Clarity, Snare Drum Crack
High
6 kHz - 10 kHz - Sparkle, Brightness, Open up the Mix, Sense of Clarity
Deal of the Voice, Mosquitoes Buzz
Sparky
10 kHz - 20 kHz - Over All sparkle, Air - Brightness - Shimmer,
Modern Rap Vocal, Breathe-Ness of Pop Vocal- mass high boost on the top end
hi top Sizzle of Symbols,
wispier of Air, Angle Dust
Any serious 'mixer' should get a hearing test to determine how they perceive sound. For example, many people these days have various degrees of high frequency loss which would/should have to be factored into their mixing. Of course it may be that so many mixing engineers have these deficits that it has become the 'norm' commercially.
My parrot my African gray parrot whistles at precisely 602 HZ when I give her a head scratch.
Lied and sub’d ❤
Thank you! Welcome aboard :)
💯💯💯
🙏
The honky 600-1k range reminds me of the videos where cats sound like they are taking.
Haha that's a really good one!
I'm from Denmark. I have learned the skill to hear a Canadian. LOL
Haha you’d be correct 😂
My ear may not be the best, but I recognize a Canadian accent when I hear one.
Good ear :)
This video was made by genius 😂
I need more cowbell. 🤣
Me too 😂
The whistle technique was a game changer
You did the same video 10 months ago , but this one got way more views. Is because of the thumbnail ?
13:13 EASTENDERS?!