Drum n Bass Mixing Archives

Loopmasters Royalty Free Samples
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Okay, I know for some people these drum & bass production videos have been out for a while but just in case you missed them or was living on the moon or something here they are. I actually just recently watched the all the videos again because I loved them so much. I really love the Alix and Sabre videos because of the level of detail they go into.

Big Tip: Come back and watch the videos every now and again. As you get better and better you pick up things you missed the first time through and so on. Enjoy.

Alix Perez Masterclass:

Sabre Masterclass:

Hey if your keen on picking up a microphone so that you can add that special element to your tunes like Alix check out my review of the Blue Snowball USB or the Audio-Technica AT2020 USB.

  • Share/Bookmark

21 Drum n Bass Production Mixing Tips

Loopmasters Royalty Free Samples
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Ask any drum n bass producer what’s the hardest part of drum n bass production and 9 out of 10 will tell you its the mixdown. So with that in mind I thought I’d share a few mixing tips I’ve managed to pick up along the way.

1. Compression, now before everyone gets their knickers in a knot. I’m not talking about squeezing the life out of your
drums. I’m talking about using a compressor on your drum buss to help glue all your drum sounds together. Its important to make your drums sound like one uniform cohesive sound and compression will do the trick quite well.

2. Try to separate all your drums onto their own tracks. This makes it nice and easy for level changes but also if something needs replacing later in the mix as well.

3. Try adding a touch of reverb to your drums to bring them to life and to make them sound more natural.

4. Try adding an envelope shaper to hits to bring out more attack or to round out the sound more. Works great with snares and kicks and you can even use it on your master buss!

5. If your having trouble with your kick and snare getting lost in the mix try bussing them to their own group first with a separate compressor/eq etc then sending them to the drum buss.

6. Try adding a little distortion to your drums, bass, fx etc. Distortion is awesome and can add that bit of dirt your tune might be lacking. Try using it as a send and insert effect.

7. Take a break every 2 hours or so. You need to give your ears a chance to rest especially if you’re monitoring at loud volumes. Always check your mixes the NEXT morning with a fresh set of ears.

8. Try to cut with EQ first before boost.

9. Generally EQ after compression. This way you don’t undo what the compression has done!

10. When compressing a sound make to use the bypass button to check on what compression your applying.

11. Play around with your fx/vst plugins chains. A reverb after a delay sounds different to a delay after reverb.

12. Layering isn’t always about putting 9 basslines on top of each other. Sometimes it can be subtle like duplicating a drum track, added compression and blending that back in with the original.

13. However, layering in drum  n bass is critical in getting that “sound” for your drums and bass. If your drums or bass are sounding weak, its time to layer up!

14. Make sure to apply bass cut to a channel when you can. Its so important to freeing up some headroom and making space in your mix. You an analyzer if you can as well to check if you have any rogue frequencies down in the sub area you don’t need.

15. If your unsure what a certain know or switch or fader does on a plugin or fx or synth test the extreme settings on it and listen to whats happening to the sound. When you’ve worked out what’s going on bring it down to a sensible level.

16. Sidechaining is becoming popular in drum n bass production as well so if your having trouble getting your kick and bass to punch through together try sidechaining them.

17. Sidechaining is not only reserved for the your kick and bass you can get excellent results sidechaing some pads with your kick etc.

18. Don’t be afraid to go into the red a little when your mixing down your track. 3db should be okay but use your ears when you do so.

19. If 2 sounds or more are fighting for the same frequency range try panning them a little left and right. This will help with the separation a lot.

20. Don’t be afraid to use a limiter on your master buss to squeeze out some more db. I’d say 98% of drum n bass producers use limiters in one way or another. So you might as start learning about what they do and how they sound now!

21. When using EQ first sweep the frequency bands slowly and listen out for any horrible resonant frequencies that jump out at you. Then use EQ cut to remove those frequencies. A little here and there can make a huge difference to the overall sound.

Okay then, 21 drum n bass production mixing tips as promised. However, most of these tips can be applied to any genre of music you might make so get cracking!

see you on the dancefloor.

Dauntless

  • Share/Bookmark

Improving your drum n bass mixdowns and beats

Loopmasters Royalty Free Samples
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Howdy,
Well its been a crazy 3 weeks! With not less than 4 international artists stepping through my door into the studio! The Nofrills Crew of late has been really on fire of late putting on the best dnb parties in the country. The good news for us is that crowd numbers are on the up and by the looks of the current trend its only going to go up and up.

Did I manage to learn anything from the international jetset superstars? Hell yes! First of I want to thank Tim – Current Value, Flo – Phace, Stu – State of Mind and Dave – The Sect for popping in and saying hello and spending the time to hang out! Respect! Read the rest of this entry

  • Share/Bookmark

Which Plugins for Drum n Bass Part IV

Loopmasters Royalty Free Samples
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Howdy, welcome to part four of my four part series. However, can I tell you something first before I begin? Well my friend to be honest, four parts is probably not enough to cover the huge amount of plugins that you can choose from. these days. I could easily write 6 or 7 or even 10 articles on the most useful plugins for drum n bass. However, what i wanted to do was give a good overview on some of the plugins that I use for DnB. Read the rest of this entry

  • Share/Bookmark

Spectrum Analyzers and Drum n Bass

Loopmasters Royalty Free Samples
 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

What the hell are Spectrum Analyzers and what on Earth do they have to do with Drum n Bass?

Okay, before we go and tackle this subject we have to delve a little deeper into the world of Drum n Bass and Music Production.

It doesn’t matter whether or not you produce in a 100k studio or your mums garage. A spectrum analyzer is a very handy tool to have in your plugin folder because it can show you things you might well have missed. I’ll give my personal favorites at the end of this article and I’ll also show you how I set them up and use them as well.

A Spectrum Analyzer is a plugin designed to give you a visual representation of a audio signal. The plugin will normally display the frequency and db of the signal on an X-Y graph.  Now for simplicities sake i wont go into detail about the mathematics of how it works, (that’s for another article) just believe me when I say that it does and that’s all you really need to know.

As I’m sure you are well aware Drum n Bass is constantly pushing new  sonic boundaries since its birth and continues to do so even today! One way that it does so is to utilize and maximize each frequency spectrum and this is where a Spectrum Analyzer can help out enormously.

Right now at this moment you have a million different choices on what spectrum analyzer you can try.  I tend to use the free analyzer “Span” made by Voxengo.

voxengospan Spectrum Analyzers and Drum n Bass

Note: Voxengo has just updated Span to version 1.9.1

I use this analyzer for a number of reasons:

1. Its free.

2. Its dead easy to setup.

3. Its easy to understand whats going on.

4. It has some great options.

5. Low CPU hit.

After you have installed it you need to set it up. Fire up Span on an audio channel and place a simple house 4×4 kick drum pattern on there. Now what you want to do is use the speed and block controls to match the beat of the kick. Make sure the timing is spot on and the waveform has enough detail in it. Save the new settings as the default preset so that you don’t have to set that again. You need to do the above because its important that you are viewing a correct visual representation of whatever you are analyzing. If you do it right you’ll be able to pick out the hump of a kick in a break or the sub content in a pad sound.

Note: Do not go crazy with the analyzer! Remember your ears should be the final judge when it comes to a sound. Music is all about using your EARS! Nobody really cares about how it looks on an analyzer!

Okay some tips on what to use it for.

1. I use it to clean up low rumble on kicks, snares, hi-hats etc. Kicks in DnB shouldn’t really have any sub content. So

anything under 60hz should be filtered/EQed out. Just use a HP filter or a Lowcut filter. With snares and hi-hats you

can cut a little higher up.

2. I love to use when i’m A/Bing with other commercially finished tunes. I always compare to the .wavs by the way.

For example: I check how high the sub bass is in a Phace tune and compare it mine.

3. When eqing kicks or snares I’ll make adjustments whilst looking at the analyzer for confirmation. I only use it for

confirmation. Don’t fall into the trap of thinking “the analyzer looks fantastic therefore the sound is good” always use

your ears.

4. Determining the pitch of a sample/break etc.  Grab a Pitch/Frequency chart and have fun!

Some other analyzers worth mentioning.

1. Pioneerhill SpectraPlus. Used by the heavyweights Noisia and Phace. Awesome real time analyzer.

2. Elemental Audio/Roger Nichols Spectrum analyzer. Used by Chase & Status!

3. I love the analyzer that ships with the Logic EQ. Brilliant.

4. Waves Paz Analyzer. A powerful plugin with some great features. Not in love with the gui that much but it all fairness

its been around for while now.

Well i hope that helps you out somehow.

Peace out.

www.myspace.com/dauntlessdnb

www.sydneyfriction.com

  • Share/Bookmark