100% agree with this. On numerous occasion I've compared a track with hi-pass EQ applied on sounds compared to without. The ones without the EQ almost always sound 'warmer'. However how it would sound on a big PA (where lower frequencies will be big anyway) may not do it so much justice.loopdon wrote:I have experienced that very often myself. Just when you think you've really done everything perfectly you switch back to see how marvellous your work was and notice i didn't actually improve. I reckon it's more about knowing when NOT to apply eq etc.bduffy wrote:Mission accomplished!
Actually, I was just working on a mix where I was highpassing everything by-the-book, and I thought it sounded pretty good until I went back a couple versions (to bounce out another drum submix) and heard it without the highpasses; it was way better!![]()
So I went back and set my passes to the lowest I could get away with, and that worked much better for this song. Actually, I just plain removed some EQ's altogether; f**k it, let the ME deal with it!Like JumpingJackFlash says: there is no one formula for them all.
So, given that it seems to be commonly accepted to high pass everything to allow the kick & bass room to breath, and yet in our experience it removes soul/precense from the track... What's the go?!?!

