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Messages - Kryojen

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WIPs / Re: Chorus/"Drop" sounding weak/odd on some of my tracks!?
« on: January 12, 2016, 03:46:31 am »
Try automating your master or pre-master volume so that it's a couple db lower for all parts except the chorus. That's the quickest, easiest way to add "oomph" to your drop.

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Samples/Plugins/Software/Gear / Re: Tuning Drum Samples in your DAW
« on: January 11, 2016, 08:37:47 pm »
In Ableton, warp your sample then use the pitch knob in the sample editing window. Make sure you're using the complex or complex pro algorithms (complex auto-adjusts the formant, and is nice for smaller pitch shifts. complex pro lets your change the formant and envelope manually, which give greater control over the sound at the cost of time).

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Mixing/Mastering / Re: Tell us your master chain!
« on: January 10, 2016, 12:40:46 am »
I'll usually start with Pro-Q 2 highpass and lowpass to give me some headroom, the into an Ozone preset (I love the Greg Calbi presets) tweaked as necessary (usually playing with the mb compressor and maximizer). Then I like to use a dbx-160 to glue the mix together a bit, and add some of that "analogue warmth" :P. After that, I'll run my mix through a couple instances of Pro-L to bring up the loudness. Pretty straightforward, but it gets the job done!

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Mixing/Mastering / Re: Perceived Loudness
« on: January 10, 2016, 12:33:14 am »
Okay,

So I know I may get some backlash here by buying into the loudness war, but I believe a great amount of the general public prefers loud music as opposed to quiet music, so, I am asking about any tips here to raise the perceived loudness (not necessarily RMS) of my tracks.

Thanks!

Basically the easiest way to make your stuff really damn loud is slam it into a few limiters. If I'm trying to make something insanely loud, I'll first make sure I exaggerate the crap out of my gain stage. Like, parts you want to be quite need to be REALLY quite in your premaster. Then, I'll toss an EQ on and highpass at ~30hz, lowpass at ~20khz to increase headroom. Slap an Ozone preset on, into waves l3 (-.3db output) into an l2 (also -.3db) and then into as many pro-l instances as I need to get the sound loud, but not distorted (all limiters at -.3db). Remember: final master should be at -.3db so when it gets converted into mp3 or whatever, you don't get any clipping.

Many people might hate the loudness war, but it's a fact that the average person equates loudness with quality to a certain extent, so making your mixes louder is beneficial. Just don't overdo it.

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