Sub-forum for discussion about the DAWs and mobile apps that you use with your MPCs
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By Fanu Thu Aug 20, 2015 8:15 am
(this is a copy of my blog post so the pictures are missing. To see the pix, see the blog post at http://fanumusic.com/about-high-pass-fi ... our-songs/)

Some time ago I blogged about getting your sub bass right. Another thing worth mentioning relating to having a good sub is highpass-filtering the song – and being careful with it. Sometimes I see this done wrong in the premasters I receive for mastering, and thought writing about this might help producers to get the sub right. This mostly applies to "bass music" where the sub bass is lower than the kick and where we want to achieve the fat, full low end, but can definitely be used with other genres, too.

Why HP-filter your song? There’s two things.

1) To get rid of excess lows and rumble and to gain more headroom – and to make it louder in the end. It’s good practice to highpass the signal around 25–40Hz, but one should go for mellow slopes such as 12 dB per octave. Once again, listen carefully, and if your listening environment isn’t the best, use a visual aid such as Voxengo SPAN. In SPAN, you should always see something even in the very lowest region. See Pic 1 above for how it looks when you’ve got it all right, and Pic 2 for how it looks when the high passing has been done too high/steep. That won’t sound natural, and causes problems in mastering if we want to get a weighty result.

2) High passing the whole song and with a resonant HP filter can actually help to boost the sub, too, and make it more “firm” – where it matters. In mastering, I always set the filter to create a little “bump” around 40 Hz, which can be set to taste and according to the song. It does make the low end more firm in most cases in bass music.

I’ve had a few mastering cases where HPing at 40 Hz made the song feel like it loses too much meat, but then again, IMHO, having fundamental at 35 Hz or so is a little too low, and 98% of the songs I master get the 40 Hz treatment and they come out great.

Happy filtering!
By dazastah Thu Aug 20, 2015 2:04 pm
I agree :nod: .. I usually hp filter everything at mixing stage to create the most amount of space possible before mixing.... Especially when sampling from vynal, i use hp filter so much that i sometimes don't need to eq things to make it sound better... I normally(before eqing) cut out the shit, rather than polish the turd...
Imagine when everything is layered using only samples from vynal, how much excess energy is being added/summed only to take away so much more headroom when you finally get it mastered and it doesn't get as loud as everything else... mixing is always easier for me when i apply this process to all samples/tracks (according to it frequency spot/space bandwidth etc)