fred wrote: > [snip] > > For complete beginner [snip], you can have a pack with presets > here : > > http://www.linuxmao.org/tikiwiki/tiki-index.php?page=Jamin#Presets_pour_Jamin > [snip] >
This is what I mean with home-recording tricks. In addition there should be some EQ settings, that can be used as hints, not as presets, what to do, if you need to give some instruments or the stereo sum, to get less muddy sound. You can do good masterings without using a compressor, if you won't do popular dancefloor music. 14KHz, 12KHz and 80Hz IMO are the most important marks for a raw mix with less good equipment, but there are no basic settings. It's not possible to say "start with +-xdB at those marks". For 80Hz you can say, that a shelving filter most times is a usable choice, but for 12 to 14 KHz it's not possible. Is the equipment able to do 20KHz etc.? HIFI and some cheap studio equipment often come with 100Hz filters for the bass and in addition with a bad "Q". I didn't work a lot with Linux, but I've got the impression that the LADSPA filters I tested are not clean, that means you need to trust you ears and you can't follow professional hints. Just my 2 Cents ;). _______________________________________________ 64studio-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.64studio.com/mailman/listinfo/64studio-users
