By
Fess
Sun Aug 17, 2008 6:58 pm
[quote="D_Samp"]layering will just give a boost to the perceived volume (eg 3dB of gain everytime its "doubled")
the best advice for "thick" drums or "big" drums or whatever adjective you want to use, ie this.... choose THICK or BIG samples
if you start with a good source sound you END with a good sound.
EQ doesnt come into it. like i said in another thread, part of my job is fixing up other peoples audio mistakes, and 9 times out of 10 its the terrible way people use EQ.
leave the EQ alone, and actually LEARN the theory behind comrpession. your beats will love you for it. theres no shortcut to good compression (outside of boing presets). compression will single-handedly phatten up your drums moreso then anything else if used correctly.
but theres a million other things you know.... we all have our nuances in drum mastering.... but as far as general things go, a good compressor and good skills with it will put you in front of the thousands of others with **** drums every day.
I don't know how many hip hop tracks you've mixed, but what you've said is not even close to being true-you NEED eq to make original sounding drums-period. Layering drum sounds directly on top of each other will double the sound -yes, but the trick is to move each sound just a bit to the left or right-like a few ticks. And eq DEFINITELY has alot to do with shaping each sound and making drums 'thump'. Eq, combined with the right type of compression, and gating will give you those thick, original sounding, tight drums you want provided you start with a decent sample and know which frequencies to adjust when equing.
Last edited by Fess on Sun Aug 17, 2008 7:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.