By MrDismal
Tue Apr 24, 2018 12:14 am
Yo!
I've never done this technique before, and only using it after discovering that certain frequencies wouldn't be audible through my small 5" monitors, but sound dope in headphones, anyway..
I have a bass note I sampled in, and layered it with another bass note in the same key, except it's an octave up.
Sounds a ton better on both monitors and headphones since I have the lower octave with low freq's and the higher octave (a completely different bass sample) with a more natural bass guitar for those frequencies.
Is there anything wrong with doing this? I mean using 2 samples but different octaves?
Sonically it sounds fine, at least on my KRK's and headphones, and I can't hear any frequency wobbles.
I've layered bass before but it's always been in the same octave.
Before you say, "well if it sounds good then why you asking?" I just wanted to see if anyone else does this? I've never heard of anyone do this before, and I've read a lot of audio crap online over the years.
I've never done this technique before, and only using it after discovering that certain frequencies wouldn't be audible through my small 5" monitors, but sound dope in headphones, anyway..
I have a bass note I sampled in, and layered it with another bass note in the same key, except it's an octave up.
Sounds a ton better on both monitors and headphones since I have the lower octave with low freq's and the higher octave (a completely different bass sample) with a more natural bass guitar for those frequencies.
Is there anything wrong with doing this? I mean using 2 samples but different octaves?
Sonically it sounds fine, at least on my KRK's and headphones, and I can't hear any frequency wobbles.
I've layered bass before but it's always been in the same octave.
Before you say, "well if it sounds good then why you asking?" I just wanted to see if anyone else does this? I've never heard of anyone do this before, and I've read a lot of audio crap online over the years.