Another great post, thanks 2GooD. Any chance of getting a short walkthrough of how to boost the freq's using Reason?
Its simply done with an eq.
It depends on how deep you want to go and how much processor power you have too.
Many eq's can end up hogging processor power.
To keep it simple....
load a mixer, load a redrum, load drum samples and get a basic beat going...
or if you already have a drum pattern and want to enhance the sound....
left click the instrument device that has the drums so that the border comes around it, then create m-class equalizer.
the level meter should work on the eq when you play the track indicating its getting its input.
If not reroute the wires by flipping the display with the tab button and route redrum main out -> eq line in.
eq line out -> master mixer.
Once the eq is connected properly....
On the eq, make sure low cut is active,
set low shelf freq to around 50hz, low shelf q all the way left, and drop the gain to around -12 to -18, this cuts the extreme lows that will clash with bassline and effect the ability to find volume without distortion when finally mastering the track..
Settings for param 1 on the eq
Freq = 85 - 95 hz this boosts the kick.
Q adjusts the fullness of the kick, too much and the kick becomes muddy, too little and the kick lacks depth,
Gain adjusts how much you wish to boost the kicks punch.
You can add a little bit of sparkle to a beat by adding a subtle boost in the high end using param 2 on the eq.
Or setting param 2 to 1.2khz you can add some snap to the snare.
Or you can use param 2 to take away from 300hz if the kick is a bit muddy.
Thats just a start on using the eq for drums, the rest is where you take it.
Just remember to listen carefully to the output while you twiddle the dials, and get to grips with what it does. Its really not that complicated once you have done it a few times, things get more complicated with multi band compressors, but reason doesnt have that.
Once you know the frequencies of certain sounds, then it becomes a lot easier using an eq to enhance sounds.
apply this general formula making subtle changes to your own taste and you will start to understand through hearing the differences you couldnt hear before.
Generally hiphop dominates bass and hi end frequencies.
Bass = high volume, mids = medium volume, hi hats/freq = high volume. Thats a general rule I read somewhere, but then rules are made to be broken.
Also listen to some of your favorite tracks from your favorite artists and listen very deeply to the way the beat has been equed. Listen beyond the words and just study the music. Its best to do this with a level freq setting on the amp/eq, and mix your tracks with the same level freq setting.
Its setting a neutral start point, a point of comparison. Always mix to the same neutral eq settings on your amp/eq.
I hope that helps a little, and I hope its easy to understand.
NOTE: when equing and mixing individual instruments make sure you havent added a mastering suite between the hardware mixer and the main mixer or if you have set it to bypass. Once you have equed all the instruments in a track to your liking and the levels are how you want them without distortion, then you add the mastering suite, but that would take a tutorial.