UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
How to compensate/compromise between "good" headphones for mixing, and crap ones for listening?
What's Hot
I've tried googling this and generally the results are around why stuff sounds good on headphones but then doesn't on monitors, which I already understand and that is fine. I only really listen to my own music on headphones so i don't really care that much how they sound through speakers. And my monitor speakers are not very good anyway.
But what I'm trying to work out, is how to compensate things so that I get more of the fullness (especially lower frequency sounds) that I can hear when I'm using my "proper" headphones whilst mixing and using my audio interface, that fall away completely when I later listen to the exported MP3 or Wav through normal consumer style earphones.
I used to compensate for my rubbish studio monitors by cranking up the bass on the amp modelling unit I was using, both the eq on the amp and on the global EQ, it sounded great through the speakers but if I recorded or used headphones it was SO LOUD on the bass. I feel like compensating the lower frequencies to allow for the crap sound of normal level earbuds will surely just ruin the experience for me on my nicer headphones? I suppose I could do do two different versions but I work quickly as I don't really enjoy using recording software for very long so by the time I've got it sounded adequate I've normally already lost the will to live and just want to hear it as it is.
I realise that this question sounds a bit like "Why does something sound nice on nice headphones and rubbish on rubbish ones" but that's not what I mean. Proper songs sound fine on the rubbish headphones, so there's clearly a compromise to be found somewhere that helps one without ruining the other?
Or is it just the impact of listening through the interface? I can't use my nicer headphones through the laptop directly as it's only got a big jack. Is it just a case of trying to mix using my crap earphones?
I don't really know if my "nicer" headphones are actually any good but they sound nice enough to me - they are Sennheiser HD579, is it the case that they just aren't very good in a different way and are just more bassy to make up for being rubbish?
Good Example would be this Fretboard composition challenge entry, in my Cubase session and even on the exported file, the bassy synth pad thing sounds really full and nice whereas through normal earphones and my work headset, you can't hardly hear it and it just sounds like I forgot to export half the arrangement on the verses.
I know there's the element of trial and error but my concentration span and patience levels are not great so would really appreciate some general shoves in the right direction (ideally using short words if possible as I'm not the brightest spark).
Thank you
Matt
0 LOL 0 Wow! 0 Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Comments
Thanks for the suggestion though, makes sense, i'm just an awkward sod
I make a note of what can be lacking on the rubbish gear and tweak it until it sounds better but also making sure it's not now overdone on the better gear. Sometimes you've just got to accept that things sound a bit crap on crap gear. I need to learn way more about mastering but have found that multi band compression can play a huge part.
I also might send my final master link to a friend to give a perspective with fresh ears
I don't really have anybody to send stuff to who like the same things as me, so whenever i've tried to do that with anybody it's usually just ended up in an argument.
I'll reread the Soundonsound thing again as it's interesting and good to know for typical use case and knowledge is a good thing. But I guess being the millennial snowflake I am, I don't really think I am a typical use case. I listen to a lot of music on headphones, so I've always thought it made sense for me to mix that way as that's how I'm used to hearing things. I struggle with listening to speakers or "live" sound in general, I get distracted by background noises and struggle to hear louder or bassier sounds as well as the quieter trebly noises, so I just don't bother listening that way. Apart from when I share stuff on here nobody ever hears my music, I've got a lot of stuff written and recorded that never sees the light of day, I don't really have any friends to share it with and my family are usually quite disparaging about it f I share anything so my listenership is a crowd of 1. However, i'd still argue that it does matter because it's my therapy and even though I'm never going to sell any music, it doesn't necessarily mean I shouldn't care about it. Otherwise we'd all be playing £60 Fazely guitars through an Amplug right?
That's when listening on my 'downstairs headphones' (Bose QC in passive mode). I'll try with monitors and/or AKG headphones later.
(Nice song, BTW).
Annoyingly, I see that I've left my Beyer's at work. Will try some monitors tomorrow.
However when I listened to the export on my Sennheiser headphones through the audio interface it did sound the same, so I don't think it is a similar issue to the weird reverb thing I had before.
I think Perhaps the headphones are just the equivalent of TV sound system type things where they big up certain frequencies to make them sound better
I just did the thing again this evening with my interface (gosh the laptop sounds utterly atrocious by itself) and just redid the bass instead and went heavy handed with it. The original synth pad sound I played in manually and recorded so I had no midi data for it as my keyboard only works 50% of the time for that kind of thing. So I just drew it in instead, played through a plug in (Martinique key bass model of an old bass keyboard) and copied and pasted to the Spitfire BBC orchestra plugin in plucked doubled basses. I think it sounds more present so I think I just need to get used to over doing the bass compared to what I like to hear in cubase, if I expect it to be heard outside of that setup
It becomes less trial and error as you get used to it.
@AntonHunter has made an excellent point about adding saturation to bass to help with cheaper speakers. I often add some saturation to bass, drums (for the low end) and vocals (often for a bit of higher end fizz). II do that in the individual tracks rather than in the master channel.
Another bass trick is to record the dry bass guitar (or midi keys bass) and duplicate that to two or three tracks. You use that to make very different tones - for example one very much lower end, another which is bright and accentuating the transients and perhaps a third middle of the road tone, then you can blend the tracks to get a bit more definition and effective saturation.
BTW if you ever need a fresh pair of ears feel free to give me a shout. I might record different stuff to you but am always happy to give a (honest but moderately ill-informed) opinion
The new version has more meat (harmonics, plus those string plucks) although now I've listened to the original one, V2 feels unsubtle! You can't win.
I'm not too bothered about losing subtlety, that's not my strength in any case aha.