Fixing a hole in the ocean

Mixing songs with bass content has always been problematic for me. Often when I do a mix where I thought I had hit the sweet spot with a bass guitar or bass synth pad, once I listened on my home or car stereo it was boomy. I recently put in some high end speakers, Meyer HD-1’s to replace my bass light Genelec 8040a’s, thinking that might fix the problem. Well they helped certainly, but in the process I unplugged my sub-woofer thinking I would not need it any more. So hear I am again, chasing the gear tiger, trying to get my mixes tight in the low end.
So it was with great interest that I read an article by Carl Tatz in the Nov. 2015 Sound-On-Sound, one of my favorite recording magazines. I have been following Carl’s newsletters about his Phantom Focus system with some interest, but felt that this level of acoustic treatment was way beyond my budge or needs. What caught my attention in this article was the simple fix for a hole in the bass response that is due not to speakers, but to the cancellations that occur when speakers are mounted on stands near the mixing desk. In my instance I have the Meyer’s on acoustic isolated stands positioned for near field monitoring, as shown here.

Studio with Meyers and REW setup3 Looking at the frequency plot in Carl’s article I saw the big dip in the bass response from around 63-125 Hz, which is a critical range for low bass frequencies. What is happening is cancellation of frequencies due to the bouncing around of the low bass from the floor, ceiling, mixing desk, basically a chaotic environment at the critical listening position and very difficult if not impossible to fix using acoustic treatment without spending big bucks. I had already invested around $4000 in bass traps, absorbers on the walls and ceilings, and diffusors for the live end of my long, narrow studio space. I was hoping to find an easier fix, and this article provides it. The secret to fixing the hole in the ocean of audio is, SUB-WOOFERS. The rationale is that a sub can “fill in” those problematic frequency areas when set correctly for sufficient loudness and frequency crossover. That being the clue I was looking for, I pulled out my lap top with the free Room EQ Wizard program, set up and calibrated by Galaxy CM-140 SPL meter which has an output that can be fed into the computer for measurement purposes, and because taking measurements. I was mainly interested in sweeping the low end, so I accepted the default range of 200 Hz and below. Here is what I got without a sub-woofer.  The red arrow shows clearly the “hole” in the bass response from about 90 – 120 Hz, very similar to what Carl talked about in his article. no sub
This can be visualized nicely as a waterfall plot. The “hole in the ocean” is pretty obvious above 90 Hz. That is what has been messing with my mixes!  Time to fill it in. no sub waterfall So next I dug out my trusty KRK Sub-Woofer, hooked it up in line with the Meyers using a high pass filter set at 80 Hz. That means that the sub will put out the majority of the bass frequencies below 80 Hz, effectively bolstering the low end. I did not want to set the cross-over too high because the Meyers have a pretty decent bass response as well, and I am not looking to shake the room. After experimenting I set the relative level on the sub to +3 dB, and ran some tests, playing around with the cross-over and sub level. The results are shown here: sub 80 hz xver sub 80 hz xver waterfall Looks like most of the hole is filled in now. I will continue to experiment with the best settings for the sub, but for now I am excited this solution actually worked. Thanks to Carl Tatz for his great and very useful article.

Comments

  1. diamondjim says:

    Follow-up, I listened to two mixes redone with this sub-woofer setting at +3 dB, and I seems like I under mixed the bass, having perceived enough bass in the mix position. Tried the mix on normal hi-fi speakers and it seemed light, needing a bit more punch. So I dropped the sub level to unity gain, and re-mastered the two tracks that seemed a bit thin. This is really more of a matter of how it sounds rather than how much is the hole filled in on some graph! Using my ears here.

  2. Hi Jim – I read the SOS article by Carl Tatz and found it interesting. How’s your low end going? Have you found the best position for your subs? I’ve read Hugh Robjohn’s article (SOS Apri ’07) on subwoofers. It seems placement is critical and he describes how to do it.

    I’ve been reading up online (Gearslutz forum etc) and SOS and working/experimenting on my home studio’s acoustics using Fuzzmeasure and REW, starting to make bass traps etc
    Not sure if I’ll try subs yet. I’m using Neumann K120 monitors.
    I’m finding the more you learn the more there is to learn!

    D

    • diamondjim says:

      I can’t say I have the best position for the sub. I did notice that after I “filled the hole” the bass was too prominent, so maybe I will take a look at that SOS article, thanks for pointing it out! I am finding that while bass traps help, there is not a whole lot you can do past a certain point, not without helmholz traps and the like, and I just don’t have room for that.
      dj

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