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Zenchowdah
I'm beyond it.
Registered: Jul 2003
Location: va
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so then would one need a godly knowledge of the mechanics of sound in order to drop just the vocals, or just the bass line? ive been playing with winamp's equalizer because im bored, and i cant seem to isolate any single part of it. i realize that a bassline isnt just the first three sliders, but i cant really find any consistencies in it.
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Jun-20-2004 22:52
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meneedit
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Dec 2001
Location:
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what I would like to know is...
which sliders are for bass and which are for treble?
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Jun-20-2004 22:52
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Zenchowdah
I'm beyond it.
Registered: Jul 2003
Location: va
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hmm
maybe if i didnt try it with Ludacris and used some trance...
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Jun-20-2004 22:53
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meneedit
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Dec 2001
Location:
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you probably wont be able to isolate any part of it.
it'll just start to either get muffled or too resonant
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Jun-20-2004 22:55
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Zenchowdah
I'm beyond it.
Registered: Jul 2003
Location: va
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| quote: | Originally posted by meneedit
what I would like to know is...
which sliders are for bass and which are for treble? |
well, sound is just a series of vibrations on your eardrums, and the faster that the vibrations happen, the higher the pitch. as bass is low pitch, and treble is high pitch, the more frequent the vibrations, the closer to the treble end it would be.
which is the treble end?
well, frequency is measured in hertz, hz, and on an equalizer, a simple one like the one on winamp im playin with, goes from 60 hz, to 16000 hertz. the more frequent the vibrations are, the higher the pitch, so therefore, the 16000 hz end would be treble, and the 60 end would be bass.
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Get Killed.
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Jun-20-2004 22:57
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Tranc3
tranceaddict in training

Registered: May 2002
Location: Santa Cruz, CA, US
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Re: Would anyone care to explain to me how equalizers work?
| quote: | Originally posted by Zenchowdah
I realize that sound exists at frequencies, expressed in hz, but i do not understand how an equalizer serves to play with these.
i also know that the lower the freq. the lower the sound. the 60 hz end is the low end, then mid range, then treble |
An equalizer acts as a gate with a push - it can either cut off frequencies in a certain range, or it can boost frequencies in a certian range. Cutting off the high end will effectively run everything through a low-pass filter, whereas the opposite will do a high-pass, etc... Subtractive eq'ing is the most common (where you filter out frequencies), although boosts are also incorporated. It all depends on the application and the desired effect.
While 60Hz is on the lower end of things, it's not THE low end. I've seen mixers that will go down to 10Hz, and all the way up to 40,000Hz. Typically with a good eq unit, instead of separating the range into bass and treble, it will go low, mid, high, or low, low-mid, mid, high-mid, high, or even more specific for applications like production work instead of DJ'ing work.
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Jun-21-2004 01:00
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Tranc3
tranceaddict in training

Registered: May 2002
Location: Santa Cruz, CA, US
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| quote: | Originally posted by Zenchowdah
well, sound is just a series of vibrations on your eardrums, and the faster that the vibrations happen, the higher the pitch. as bass is low pitch, and treble is high pitch, the more frequent the vibrations, the closer to the treble end it would be.
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Not exactly, sound is actually travelling in waves which compress the air. What you hear are the compressions and rarefactions as the wave passes through. The vibrations are what cause the sound, but the compressions are what let you hear the sound.
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Jun-21-2004 01:02
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