Bass Harmonics and Missing Fundamentals and Clarity AND ...
Bass Harmonics and Missing Fundamentals and Clarity AND ...
In my kitchen, I have an old FM Walkman hooked up to a pair of crappy computer speakers - probably first generation comp speakers... go ahead and laugh. Nobody sees them - they are tucked behind a jar in the corner. It's on sometimes when I'm in that area.
I was listening this afternoon for a couple of hours to the radio, and it dawned on me that I could hear the bass pretty clearly on every song - not FEEL it, but more or less make it out quite well. This was a classic rock station that played from the 60s to now. The two little speakers do not have a very good freq range.
Since the radio station played 50 years worth of stuff, are they the ones manipulating somehow so that it translates properly in a bunch of midrange systems?
Or have the engineering pros been doing this for a long time now?
Does some happen in the mastering stage?
From what I understand , you can saturate the bass guitar in order to bring up the level of the harmonics.
Are there standard methods for this? One channel has the dry bass guitar - another has the harmonics - level between the two?
Could someone share their experiences in how they enhance the harmonics of the bass guitar so they have clarity on a midrangy system?
Thanks.
I was listening this afternoon for a couple of hours to the radio, and it dawned on me that I could hear the bass pretty clearly on every song - not FEEL it, but more or less make it out quite well. This was a classic rock station that played from the 60s to now. The two little speakers do not have a very good freq range.
Since the radio station played 50 years worth of stuff, are they the ones manipulating somehow so that it translates properly in a bunch of midrange systems?
Or have the engineering pros been doing this for a long time now?
Does some happen in the mastering stage?
From what I understand , you can saturate the bass guitar in order to bring up the level of the harmonics.
Are there standard methods for this? One channel has the dry bass guitar - another has the harmonics - level between the two?
Could someone share their experiences in how they enhance the harmonics of the bass guitar so they have clarity on a midrangy system?
Thanks.
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6691
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
Re: Bass Harmonics and Missing Fundamentals and Clarity AND
they are manipulating it for sure, but i doubt anything they're doing could be considered good.jellotree wrote:Since the radio station played 50 years worth of stuff, are they the ones manipulating somehow so that it translates properly in a bunch of midrange systems?
them and the bass players.Or have the engineering pros been doing this for a long time now?
maaaayyyyyybe. not really.Does some happen in the mastering stage?
that's pretty much what you do.From what I understand , you can saturate the bass guitar in order to bring up the level of the harmonics.
that'll work.One channel has the dry bass guitar - another has the harmonics - level between the two?
i usually find having an amp track helps a lot, vs just having a di. i generally get a lot more midrange and presence out of the amp, and tend to lean more on that than the di in the mix.Could someone share their experiences in how they enhance the harmonics of the bass guitar so they have clarity on a midrangy system?
sometimes you just need to roll off the low end of the bass and turn it up.
sometimes copying the track, distorting the hell out of it, and blending that in with the dry track works. you might wanna roll a bunch of lows off the distorted track, and i'd do that pre-distortion.
compression is usually your friend.
just go ahead and mute the guitars entirely. you can then hear the bass much, much better.
I usually tackle guitars and bass from 4 directions.
1. DI
2. A dark mic that loves low notes and has a nice round character, such as a ribbon.
3. Then I have a small diaphragm condenser (or brighter mic) the same distance away as the ribbon or darker mic. Usually placed in a naturally brighter part of the cab, or if the option is there a brighter cone.
4. A room mic, this is placed for taste, and usually only a little is used, sometimes just subliminally but if you were toi take it away from under the balance of the other sources you will miss it.
As mentioned above, other techniques help too. Experiment with them all and work out what works best for you and the situation you are in.
1. DI
2. A dark mic that loves low notes and has a nice round character, such as a ribbon.
3. Then I have a small diaphragm condenser (or brighter mic) the same distance away as the ribbon or darker mic. Usually placed in a naturally brighter part of the cab, or if the option is there a brighter cone.
4. A room mic, this is placed for taste, and usually only a little is used, sometimes just subliminally but if you were toi take it away from under the balance of the other sources you will miss it.
As mentioned above, other techniques help too. Experiment with them all and work out what works best for you and the situation you are in.
- Recycled_Brains
- resurrected
- Posts: 2365
- Joined: Tue Nov 22, 2005 6:58 pm
- Location: Albany, NY
- Contact:
The saturation thing REALLY helps in my experience. I still haven't gotten what your after either, but it's a step in the right direction.
I'd honestly like to fig. out the best way to saturate just the upper mids/highs, and leave the low end clean. I've tried doubling the tracks and using HPF/LPF as a sort of crossover, but it never sounds right.
I'd honestly like to fig. out the best way to saturate just the upper mids/highs, and leave the low end clean. I've tried doubling the tracks and using HPF/LPF as a sort of crossover, but it never sounds right.
- Nick Sevilla
- on a wing and a prayer
- Posts: 5595
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 1:34 pm
- Location: Lake Arrowhead California USA
- Contact:
Multiple sources on the bass cab.Recycled_Brains wrote: I'd honestly like to fig. out the best way to saturate just the upper mids/highs, and leave the low end clean. I've tried doubling the tracks and using HPF/LPF as a sort of crossover, but it never sounds right.
Get one mic for the lows and one for the highs, or at least harmonics. In the mix roll off the real lows you don't need on the "harmonic" mic and then saturate that to taste and blend with the low mic. Or, duplicate the harmonic mic, one for clean and one for saturated harmonics. Done.
Obviously, it's best to get it right at the source. Sometimes this can't or won't or just doesn't happen.
It doesn't make much sense to me to high-pass before the distortion. What happens then? You end up with harmonics of harmonics. Many of those harmonics - especially the higher ones which come from pick attack and string noise - are not particulary musical. It ends up changing the character of the sound and really just comes across as a distorted bass. Sometimes that can be cool, but what if it already sounds just fine on a full range system, but gets lost on small speakers?
What I want in this case is to enhance the first octave or two above the fundamentals without messing up the rest of the thing. Now I've never mixed anything you're likely to hear on the radio, but I've had some success recently.
What I do is copy the track and then low pass so that it's pretty much only the fundamentals. Distort that. Then "bookend" the thing with an HPF to get rid of the fundamentals and an LPF to knock down some of the fizz. Mix that in very low under the other.
In the mix, this is almost inaudible on full-range systems. It makes a huge difference in bass presence when heard through bass deficient systems, though. I have a set of cheap consumer headphones I use to check this stuff.
It doesn't make much sense to me to high-pass before the distortion. What happens then? You end up with harmonics of harmonics. Many of those harmonics - especially the higher ones which come from pick attack and string noise - are not particulary musical. It ends up changing the character of the sound and really just comes across as a distorted bass. Sometimes that can be cool, but what if it already sounds just fine on a full range system, but gets lost on small speakers?
What I want in this case is to enhance the first octave or two above the fundamentals without messing up the rest of the thing. Now I've never mixed anything you're likely to hear on the radio, but I've had some success recently.
What I do is copy the track and then low pass so that it's pretty much only the fundamentals. Distort that. Then "bookend" the thing with an HPF to get rid of the fundamentals and an LPF to knock down some of the fizz. Mix that in very low under the other.
In the mix, this is almost inaudible on full-range systems. It makes a huge difference in bass presence when heard through bass deficient systems, though. I have a set of cheap consumer headphones I use to check this stuff.
new strings have always helped in my situations. not saying its right for all styles of music, but it seems that so much gets masked with bass that if you start out with the biggest clearest sound you can get going in, then it survives in the mix much better. I like new strings anyway, but its easy to forget this simple thing.
"Analog smells like thrift stores. Digital smells like tiny hands from far away." - O-it-hz
musicians are fuckers, but even worse are people who like musicians, they're total fuckers.
musicians are fuckers, but even worse are people who like musicians, they're total fuckers.
-
- ass engineer
- Posts: 47
- Joined: Sat Jun 12, 2010 6:39 pm
- Location: Toronto
- Contact:
Before you even set up mics you should be spending a good amount of time testing combinations of basses and amps. If you aren't happy with the sound in the room then you aren't going to be happy with the playback. Rent gear if you need to.
If you're doing rock electric bass get ahold of an Ampeg B-15N, and a very good sounding Fender P-Bass and most of your problems will disappear. Delicious overtones galore.
Find a nice spot in the room and put a mic there.
Now take that and record it to tape, 7.5ips or 15ips and even more sweet sounding harmonics/overtones.
You'd have to try pretty hard to make that set up sound bad.
If you're doing rock electric bass get ahold of an Ampeg B-15N, and a very good sounding Fender P-Bass and most of your problems will disappear. Delicious overtones galore.
Find a nice spot in the room and put a mic there.
Now take that and record it to tape, 7.5ips or 15ips and even more sweet sounding harmonics/overtones.
You'd have to try pretty hard to make that set up sound bad.
What worked best for me onna quick basis is to clone the track, distort it, then use a HPF on the clone and bring it up in parallel to augment the original.Recycled_Brains wrote:The saturation thing REALLY helps in my experience. I still haven't gotten what your after either, but it's a step in the right direction.
I'd honestly like to fig. out the best way to saturate just the upper mids/highs, and leave the low end clean. I've tried doubling the tracks and using HPF/LPF as a sort of crossover, but it never sounds right.
Alternatively, distort the clone and LPF the original and bring it up in parallel to augment the distorted.
The idear is to use the pass-filter to create the parallel track for what you are adding to your, eh, base-line bass-line.
-
- dead but not forgotten
- Posts: 2037
- Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2004 10:22 am
- Location: Ramah, New Mexico
True that.Nick Sevilla wrote:In order :
A Great Bass Player
A Great Bass Instrument
A Great Signal Chain
And when all else fails :
Bass SansAmp
Just listen to Rush "Moving Pictures" in it's entirety. It all starts with Geddy Lee and flows out down the line from there.
"The mushroom states its own position very clearly. It says, "I require the nervous system of a mammal. Do you have one handy?" Terrence McKenna
I find bassists who play finger-style (yes I know most bassists use their fingers, I mean versus using a pick) often have this problem. I've use multiband compression to address it.
Also, I think that rolling off some sub-bass helps. Talking about classic albums, wouldn't it be true that things recorded to tape and mastered for vinyl just didn't have dense low end that we can achieve today?
Also, I think that rolling off some sub-bass helps. Talking about classic albums, wouldn't it be true that things recorded to tape and mastered for vinyl just didn't have dense low end that we can achieve today?
-
- zen recordist
- Posts: 6691
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 11:15 am
well, certainly there's more attack and midrange 'clang' with a pick, but if you have a really good bass player, fingerstyle is definitely not a problem. i've been fortunate to do a lot of work with a truly world class bassist, and it really is all in the fingers. i don't think i've ever even used any compression on him. it just sits right.darjama wrote:I find bassists who play finger-style (yes I know most bassists use their fingers, I mean versus using a pick) often have this problem.
i often find that just shelving the low end (from say 150 or so) down a few db and turning the bass track up works wonders.Also, I think that rolling off some sub-bass helps.
probably true, but i think it's more to do with the above-mentioned p bass/B15 combo. a good bassist playing through that combo is pretty much The Sound. you really can't go wrong.Talking about classic albums, wouldn't it be true that things recorded to tape and mastered for vinyl just didn't have dense low end that we can achieve today?
-
- steve albini likes it
- Posts: 327
- Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:33 pm
- Location: kentucky
- Contact:
Something else that can help is to play the bass part again, exactly the same but with a guitar. Pan it center with the bass, and send it to the same compressor as the bass. As long as they are matched correctly it gives the illusion that it is still the bass guitar take and you can then leave your bass alone.
these are my bands and my studio
http://www.myspace.com/metatron
http://www.myspace.com/thelionaudio
http://www.myspace.com/throneoflions
http://www.myspace.com/metatron
http://www.myspace.com/thelionaudio
http://www.myspace.com/throneoflions
- Bill @ Irie Lab
- suffering 'studio suck'
- Posts: 401
- Joined: Wed Dec 03, 2003 10:53 am
- Location: Boston, USA
- Contact:
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 186 guests