How do you get your 808s sounding clean across various systems? I know, mixing. I've also read some articles on this. But I feel like I'm still struggling. So let me get specific.
Here's a beat I recently made where I used 808s on the low end instead of a bassline:
The problem: I can barely hear the 808s on my desktop speakers, they don't really come in on my wife's car either, but they sound great in my truck, on my headphones, some other systems, etc. But I know when I listen to mainstream artists/trap, I hear the 808s across all sound systems, even on my phone.
Here's how I mixed them for this track:
Sample EQ (I felt like the high end boost was already getting a little nutty):
View attachment 6827
Sample EQ (cut 20HZ + 18Khz cut):
I turned this off to test since part of me wonders if I'm cutting the lows/highs too much, but it didn't seem to change (just made things sounds a bit muddier).
View attachment 6828
Compression/Sidechain with the kick:
View attachment 6831
Attack: 0.04ms
Release: 51.99ms
Ratio: 4.1:1
Then when I was done with the basic mixing and arrangement, I sent the 808 to it's own Bass BUS when using Ozone's Mastering suite. I was noticing then that the lows weren't coming through on other systems, so I added some saturation and distortion to try and bring out the dynamics.
For anyone familiar with Softube's free saturation knob:
View attachment 6829
AND one of FL's distortion plugins (Blood Overdrive) at 19% mix level:
View attachment 6830
Then when I was monitoring everything with Tonal Balance Control, I was already often coming in above the desired low range, though I was just at the top of the range for the "bass heavy" preset. But that's why I didn't want to bump the volume anymore because I felt the mix as a whole was becoming too low.
Hip-hop reference:
View attachment 6832
Bass heavy reference:
View attachment 6833
So I eventually rolled with it because I felt like I couldn't do much else without really messing up my track by having too much bass/808.
I also use HoRNet's VHS, which is a frequency response correction plugin for mixing in headphones that helps to simulate room acoustics. Currently, I use a pair of Sennheiser HD 400 Pro, Audio-Technica M20x, and then just listen across my various home devices. I don't have any monitors, nor have I even really prioritized getting any since I don't have a treated room.
Is this a case where it's really about sound selection or am I doing something way off? Anyways, if you're still reading along, thank you! I welcome any and all advice!