On 10 April 2010 at 9:51, Ken Restivo <ken@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > We're getting very near release for our first CD, which > was mixed, edited and overdubbed on Linux in Ardour, and > will probably be mastered on Linux as well. Here are some > getting-pretty-close-to-finished mixes: > > http://lahar.s3.amazonaws.com/scratchmixes-basic/foie-A.ogg > > http://lahar.s3.amazonaws.com/scratchmixes-basic/ginseng-A.ogg > > What's giving me headaches is bass rolloff on certain > systems. On the nice flat Fostex studio monitors I was able to > borrow-- and which don't have any bass emphasis--, it sounds > well balanced. On crappy iPod earbuds which roll off the bass > like crazy, it works well too. But on car stereos or club > systems which emphasize the bass, the kick drum and bass guitar > are way too hot-- sounds like the whole thing was recorded from > inside the kick. > > Not sure what to do about this. Would appreciate any advice > from the experience mix engineers around. Hi Ken, I've only seen two ways to get a mix to sound good on lots of systems. The first way is a pain, which is to take test mixes to lots of systems, and then go back to mixing to make adjustments. This is mainly trial and error. But, it can sort of get passable results. The second way is what I'm doing now, and the way it works in nicer studios. That's to have your mixing room and speakers nice and flat down lower in frequency. My current room and speakers are pretty good down to about 50Hz. Every time before I mix something that I know will have bass content I re-eq the speakers/room. I do that because I can't leave the room in a condition where I know all is well with the bass sound, unlike in pro studios, where the rooms are dedicated for that. Best of luck.... -- Kevin _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user