ᗝᑎᗴ ᗷᒪᎥᑎᗪ ᗰꖏᑌᔕᗴ

Un-Musician. Un-Affiliated. Experimental…? Apparently but almost certainly genre-confused.

  • 1 Post
  • 8 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: November 21st, 2023

help-circle
  • Are you referring to unmaking audio? I use Steinberg’s SpectrraLayers Pro as I am a Cubase user and whatever the last installation of it becomes resident as an extension but it does run standalone. I use it for things like audio repair and manipulation.

    I think the other ‘big name’ in the field would be the RX10

    None of them are perfect and it can be quite tricky to isolate to a forensic depth but I also know that SpectraLayers has better tool customisation and thresholds and also better layer management.

    I suppose, like most audio things, people will tell you that the one they use os best so I wouldn’t;t just take my word for it.


  • I rarely use a de-esser on vocals. Rather I actually manage the types of noises they reduce manually on the waveform. It’s easy to recognise things like ‘sss’ and ‘fff’ by their noise look and then they can be dropped by as much as 4db using a trim function.

    Sure, it can be slow and it means sectioning but it’s just a better option for me as a de-esser can treat some of the noise well and make others sound like a lisp. They’re a. bit all or nothing.

    If I do apply a de-essing it’s the Cubase stock one and it’s always a gentle application and always after the first compression.






  • When you say 50%, are you referring to the ‘middle’ of the frequency curve…? Try separating… low and high pass at about 150-200Hz then centering the low, keeping it clean and adding some kind of saturation to the high then panning two of that, not mad or hard L/R. If the bass conflicts with the kick for space, give the kick priority, either using dynamic EQ or multiband on a side chain.

    There is no right or wrong here, just ‘what works’ but finding the sweet spot in these strategies might help.

    Someone below mentioned double tracking the guitar by replaying. This is a good idea but make sure your timings are hitting, especially on supporting ‘power’ chords, otherwise you’ll also lose punch in the final mix. If you’re double tracking, listen in mono too. You will possibly have phasing issues.

    Enjoy.