Making bass bigger

How to make that sound...
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bigdaveo11 wrote: 1. How come you avoid compression on any of the individual.channels? Not questioning this technique just curious.
This is in response to the track posted. I could be wrong, but it sounds like a lot of compression and excitation is being used right now, and i don't think it's helping the bass stand out.

By no means is my method the end all be all, and I use compression on individual tracks all the time, but for bass, I tend to send my bass vsti layers to a bass buss and then compress THAT instead of heavy compression of seperate channels.
bigdaveo11 wrote: 2. When u parallel compress at the end of the chain are u meaning on the final aux/bus where everything is routed back to.before heading out to the master?
Parallel compression can be done two ways, either as a send effect, or in a channel's effects chain. I was referring to the bass bus, before master.
bigdaveo11 wrote: 3. When sitting up routing to split your bass track (using Logic) is the easiest/most efficient
I dont use logic, but this is the way i usually do it:
I use seperate vsti's, or multiple instances to create individual layers, all playing the same notes. Then I will make one layer the sub, and one the mid-ish track. The sub tends to be sines and triangles, and the mid tends to be more harmonicly rich osc's like squares and saws. Each vsti layer goes to its own channel, and the sub channel will often be left alone. The mid channel is where the fun happens, with slight reverb, stereo effects, distortion, parallel processing etc. THEN that gets sent to a bass buss where i use a compressor to squish the sub and mids together.
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try dada life's sausage fatener, adds a bit of grit as as the name suggests, it makes things fatter.

give it a try.

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this is a trick I learned from a dirty birdy...kinda goes everything I've learned about sub-bass mixing, but sometimes you gotta know the rules to break em. make 3 copies of your bassline. for two of them, filter everything above 100 or so, while the other filter everything bellow...I used to keep everything under 100 mono while panning/chorusing everything above for that wide sound, but do the exact opposite!!! pan ur sub bass left and right and keep the mid bass centered. this gives the sub a big wide feel and keeps the upper centered so you have more space to spread your leads/pads in the stereo field...

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loictambay wrote:this is a trick I learned from a dirty birdy...kinda goes everything I've learned about sub-bass mixing, but sometimes you gotta know the rules to break em. make 3 copies of your bassline. for two of them, filter everything above 100 or so, while the other filter everything bellow...I used to keep everything under 100 mono while panning/chorusing everything above for that wide sound, but do the exact opposite!!! pan ur sub bass left and right and keep the mid bass centered. this gives the sub a big wide feel and keeps the upper centered so you have more space to spread your leads/pads in the stereo field...
+1
Try this!
Yep, there is a name for that that I forget. That is a good one for this particular thing.
That is a way to get impossibly wide sounding, without actually being that wide, which might be important to your sub....

Also, there are plugs out there that are designed to do pan/stereo that is "outside the speaker". Play with those. I think ToneBoosters has a free one up.
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