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Réponse(s)
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ven. 23 janv. 2004, 23:37
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Rookie
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When working with analog equipment, it sometimes is good to push the meters into the red - you may get a nice, soft distortion on your mix.
With digital equipment, however, being in the red simply means that it's simply too high of a signal to handle, resulting in clipping. Clipping = crackling = bad. I've never worked with Cubase, but generally you don't want to even have an individual track in the red.
Also, keep in mind you don't want to use too much compression. Your problem may be in the way that some of the instruments, like the bass drum, were recorded. Listen to the kick drum track by itself and try to get it to sound good. If you simply can't, or it's not loud enough, it might have not been mic'ed well enough.
As for your quiet mixdowns, it's probably because you need to master them first. Bring your mixes into a program like Peak and 'Normalize' them...this will bring the loudest part of the song up to 0db and make the overall mix similar to CD volume.
Hope this helps!
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Powerbook 15" 1Ghz 768MB :: MOTU 828 :: Logic Platinum 6 :: Propellerhead Reason 2.5 :: Ableton Live 3.0.1 :: Peak 4 :: Midiman Oxygen8 :: M-Audio BX-5 Monitors :: Firewire drive
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sam. 24 janv. 2004, 01:24
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there's some good tutorials here http://www.artistpro.com/ . I think your problem may be the output levels of the compressor. Once you have processed the signal to your liking you need to adjust the output level so it doesn't clip the track when it 'returns' to the channel signal path (when u 'insert' a plugin the signal is going from the channel into the plugin and back to the channel again). Maintaining a good gain structure i.e. strong, healthy levels just below clipping is vital to a clean punchy sound. As nate d says some distortion in analog equipment is real nice but NOT in digital. However I have found that the channels in Cubase are far more forgiving than the sub-groups or masters. I have pushed the channels sometimes into the red with no noticeable distortion but I can hear the subs/masters straight away when they clip. Getting your final mix up to the level of a commercial mix is another ball game. This is why people spend a lot of money in good mastering houses. Mastering is an art to itself (getting it LOUD but still open, clean and dynamic is not as easy as it may seem). Still, fairly good results can be had by bringing your final stereo mix back into cubase (or as nate d said, a program like peak or spark), normalising it and then inserting a limiter across it. The limiter puts a 'brick wall' upper level on the signal so you can push the overall level up without clipping (sorta like a compressor but with a preset maximum output level). Be careful doing this as it can sound cool at first but then you realise you've squashed the living daylights out of the track! Waves L1 plugin is great for this. hope this helps...have fun bjkiwi
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sam. 24 janv. 2004, 08:27
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bjkiwi is right....you can clip the individual tracks in Cubase until you're blue in the face, but you won't get digital distortion. Just watch that master fader....that's the one that counts (in Cubase). If you read your manual you will discover this same information.
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