Warren I must thank you , Kristian, David Gnozzi, Dan Worrall, and Sage Audio, between your channels. You guys have pretty much helped me learn mixing, all of you have given me tips that have helped hugely, sometimes by accident. Like you might be demo'ing a plug in and use it in a way I have never thought of, and although I don;t have that plugin , I have something similar, these kinds of things, as well as actual deliberate tips. Thanks to all of you for your great information
Just took “Guitar EQ” course at Kohle Audio Kult, Kristian is talking about in this video! Really wonderful course! Just in 1 hour Kristian opened my eyes how I should EQ metal guitars in the right way because I’m still learning all about mixing metal and stuff! Thank you so much Kristian for creating this course! Kohle Audio Kult is the best place to be for all metal sound engineers! Super happy to be a part of such a wonderful community! Learning much from Kristian and other great mentors at the academy!
I use chorus on my metal guitar tracks. The 80s called me and they wanted their tone back, but I said "no I am keeping it, thank you." and hung up. True story!
I've been using EQ for years and this was pretty eye opening, It's always been such a norm to choke out the top frequencies rather than just bringing them down gently. Amazing stuff! Definitely subbed
The only reason I use compression (actually a dynamic EQ) on heavy guitars is to attenuate rumble during the palm mutes, mostly around 100-150 hz. Adds no color and is completely transparent.
Genius idea of “removing frequencies” that cover up the core of the sound, rather than trying to boost stuff which ends up sounding unnatural at that point. Love this channel.
Yes, i use the eq‘s on this way. Also on bass and other. The only right way is to experiment with all possibilitys, to find the best tone that i want in this situation. 🤘
This video dropped as I was talking to a friend about how my new guitar sounds too 'hissy' and 'airy' on the top end in a mix. I never thought to EQ it that severely, but as I'm finding out more and more its about trusting your ears over "This is how its done and how it should always be done!"
One of the tricks I use on heavy guitars is hipassing and then shelving the high end, which achieves a better roll-off and just seems to work on every rythm guitar track.
Great trick I discovered by tweaking harsh IRs I've got in my Axe FX. It really tamed those annoying highs, and used with a multiband compressor focused on low/low mids, I'm really happy with the tones I get!
I spent 15k about 15 years ago to learn the art of recording. Using HP and LP filters like this was never taught to me. I feel cheated haha. Anyway, this was very eye opening for me. Went back and tweaked some of my recent mixes and the difference was night and day. I am seriously thinking about your upcoming course. Thanks Kohl.
Hey man, so I take it you are a producer full-time? Do you have any advice for a 21-year-old music major senior who also wants to be a producer full-time?
@@ericdehaeseleer6200 It's a hobby and a passion. Have been writing songs all my life. Spent my 20's and 30's burning the midnight oil in the Seattle/Tacoma metal scene. 3 years ago, I decided it was time to get a small studio going and really get good at tracking and mixing.
@@RyvenProductions Thanks for the reply! Would you say that the 15k you spent was worth it? I'm looking at a school in Arizona that costs 18k after I get my bachelor's and I'd like to hear your thoughts on spending that kind of money to learn about production
Ive been using pro-q 3 and Low and High Freq cutting for years, but i usually cut at like 15k with a 36db curve, and then spend the next 2 hours trying to remove the high end buzz using a bell curve,.....after watching this my mind is blown as to how simple it could have been and how ive been making it more complicated! thank you!
Just tried this on some guitar tracks I had in an open project. It's far more effective than what I had been doing and easier to dial in. Thanks for the tip!
This is a common "problem" with modelers. Many people think they are all harsh. But they are generally modeling the fizz of a real close miced rig. This technique is almost a must in that world. Great job!
Well, damn. This was a lot more effective than I thought. I already rolled off the low end, but rolling off the highs like that opened space for vocals and solos in a way I hadn't anticipated. I thought I'd miss that crisp attack in the guitars, but they sat great in the mix. Cheers!
Where have you been all my life?! I've been playing for 36 years and although I've managed to track some really great guitar sounds with budget equipment I've always been mesmerized by songs with blistering heavy guitars... high gain, overdrive, distortion etc but without the noisy part of the distortion. I couldn't figure it out. And this video answered a decades long mystery for me in 8 mins 34 sec. Thank you so much! 🤘🤪🤘
I love how the amp heads are lone and stacked in the control room like that and just routed to a cab(s) in a live room/iso booth. Pretty ingenious and super practical/effiicient for choosing an amp(s), dialing in the tone, and - most importantly - looks cool af. 🤘
Very good idea. Immediately made sense and knew where this was going, but hadn’t thought of it myself. Ppl use all kinds of tools for that, C4 & multiband comp, even the plugin soothe 2 to remove unwanted high end…
Yes sir! I've found this to be a great way to fix tones up. I tend to boost some 700-ish Hz, possibly something around 1.6k, high cut filter and often a DeEsser around 4k as well to smooth out the tone and make it far more focused and detailed. Then thanks to your info, bass goes above and below the guitar in specific frequency ranges. Provided you can find a frequency for the instrument, it will always be heard :) Love your videos!
Great info top to bottom. Rule number one is get it sounding amazing while recording, so it doesn't require a lot of fixing in the first place, so I'm glad you mention that. And I love the idea of not just cutting off high frequencies aggressively, but using a gradual filter slope to get rid of the really high stuff, but easing off the frequencies right below it.
I do use compressors on heavy guitars, but more to shape the attack envelope, sometimes before the amp and sometimes after. You can also some sidechaining tricks that I like to use sometimes.
When i did my guitars i did the slope of the high cut mild on accident more like the 12 db/oct. I didn't know how to use the controls of my eq until a few days ago to make it steeper. This is a great video
Similar can be achieved by reducing presence on the amp. Or increasing presence but reducing highs, while adjusting the gain appropriately. The same applies to the low end.
I don’t think it was mentioned but this is a VERY good quality idea brought forward for general recording purposes. When you mix this condensed/compressed signal in a full band setting with other tracks, you’re going to have SO MUCH MORE CLARITY in your recording. The less busy your full spectrum EQ frequency is during a playback the better your mix will sound. You don’t want a ton of things stacked in the same frequency range if possible because it becomes cluttered and your ears simply cannot pick out the details. He talks very much around this point but in case you didn’t pick up on it thats the fact. Take it toward all of your recording efforts. You can use this methodology for vocals, bass, etc and apply it to help eliminate wasted music information and eliminate a lot of post-processing work on your mixing efforts to get this all to blend properly. Great tutorial!
I mix mostly in ableton and I find the very simple Channel EQ to be a great starting point on every track. You can do so much with just that one effect. It's worth CONSIDERING highpassing and lowpassing almost every track, I'm not saying to do it, but to consider how it could benefit each track. Use your ears!
Negative EQing in a live environment really helps in the same way. Make the mike pick up the frequency of the drum/cabinet/source and not other unwanted frequencies.
So once again, removing unwanted frequencies makes room for the wanted ones. Old story, but never thought it would actually refine the tone so much. I tried it immediately on a guitar bus, and boy oh boy, genius! Thank you for this video.
This is why... If you get the Vfe Standout, get the 2020 version because you have independent switches for the low and high pass filters. The earlier version only has one switch which affects both filters the same.
WOW what a great demonstration. I hadn’t considered using a low pass filter in this way but it makes perfect sense and makes an ENORMOUS difference. THIS will be my guitar EQ strategy from now on!
Thanks for this. I'm usually more aggressive with the filters and never question why I do it in a certain way. Deffinetely trying it with a more gentle curve in the future.
i always use the filters on the SSL channel plugin. stops me from overthinking the slope. guitar tones were still good before anyone could see the EQ on a graph.
I also like to compare hp/lp filters with shelving filters doing the same job. And pretty often I choose shelves, depending on the source material and context of course.
This is actually a real Help, I am in the final stages of finishing the mixing on my Album, and I am in the "revision" stage, and Guitar Low pass filters is on the "to do list" for double checking. I have actually used a lesser slope before on other things , but I dont tend to use it on Guitars (purely because I can be a plank sometimes and have not tried more than maybe once when I knew far less). I think this video will prompt me to check each heavy guitar track/bus and try some less extreme filter curves ( I use TDR Nova in reaper, as it has different filter slopes and dynamic eq like Fab Filter, so its also great with Palm Mutes) A few of my track shave issues with the hi end on the guitars being a bit too bitey and/or fizzy but its not something that sounds good notched out, so this is a great way to solve that issue. Thanks for a cool tip, this one is brilliantly timed, as tomorrow, I am going through my album and hopefully doing the final tweaks Many thanks :D
The thing for me is, listening to guitar tone out of mix contest is always going to sound too fizzy - until I start cutting it. I did a lot of similar mistakes often, these days I'm way more conservative about cutting high end too much, because I'm cutting a lot of harmonics that are people used to and can perceive guitar as cutting through mix better (get's more audible without being louder). I used to cut everything above 5khz, but these days I moved it a bit higher to 8-9khz and conservative slope. Again, as always, key is to listen in the context of the mix. When playing alone - I def cut a lot of highs more, they get fatiguing a lot faster, but in the mix context, a lot more masking happens and harmonics mix, so you don't get that same feeling.
Of course you should do the final moves in the mix context. For tutorials like this it is better to hear things soloed to understand what I’m talking about.
I have used high cut filters like that for guitars and other instruments as well. Sometimes even cymbals that have too much bight on the high end to smooth them out
super agree about getting it as good as you can with no eq to start with! if you have to do extreme eq curves it always winds up sounding more like noise and less musical, you know, boxy, airy in a bad way, I mean its good to sprinkle in a bit of "processed" or "low fi" here and there to keep things interesting, BUT "processed/low fi" is not good for an always-on effect. I find it is generally better if you can keep it flat(ish) between 100HZ to 6-7Khz
I really enjoy learning new techniques from people who use actual audio terminology to describe whats going on i.e. "Definition" "Sizzle" as opposed to "This sounds hairy" or " this tone has so much spank.
I use an Empress ParaEQ in my loop of my Mesa Nomad100 as a global eq. I got the idea from playing thru Mesa JP2C which was too expensive for me. I can use it to adjust for different guitars. Works great.
I think I’m one of those who does the opposite, I like to bring out some sizzle and a brutal mid section instead, I do cut a little high and some low to let the symbols and bass/kick breath, but I still want sizzle and fuzz to define the sound for clarity “not same clarity you’re used to” but I do after all use my Mesa boogie road king and love the way it sounds, I don’t want to take it away. But that’s a flavour I arrived at 10 years into recording and mixing, I just want to say that the lower you tune your guitars the more you EQ you’ll cut to make it clean, so also try the opposite in other than B tuning LOL
How can your channel have only 37k subscribers? This was a real gem of a help and I'm gonna try it later today with my own guitar and plug-ins. Gonna check your other videos as well. Thank you so much!
Great video. I typically use 12dB or 18dB filters. When you switch to 12dB per octave and slide it down (about 6:36) is beautiful. Then you bypass and all the fizz comes through - great illustration. Great vid and great channel!
I used something similar on overheads for drums. Removing some real harsh stuff. However, this was like nine years ago, and I now realize that I took out too much with the hi-pass filter. Probably had some clipping issues as well, at least on one track.
Who is ready for the KOHLE AUDIO KULT? 🤘👿
What do you want to learn from me and other mentors?
I don't see a link to your Discord in the description. Where can I find it?
Black Metal production.
Black Metal Guitar Matrix.
Series like Pure Mix "Star To Finish" preproduction/tracking/editing/Mix and Mastering are awesome.
Using EQ to move the guitar around the stereo image.
How to make drums sounds professional/polished and not get lost in a mix
Why you have 2 control rooms? Do you have to mix sample drums sometimes?
The BEST video on EQing Heavy Guitars I've ever seen! Thanks for posting
So kind of you! Best wishes from Germany Warren! 🤪🤘❤️
@@KohleAudioKult you’re the best my friend!! Amazing video
@@jfloyd2919 absolutely! We are standing on the shoulders of giants!
@@molochz hahahaha
Warren I must thank you , Kristian, David Gnozzi, Dan Worrall, and Sage Audio, between your channels. You guys have pretty much helped me learn mixing, all of you have given me tips that have helped hugely, sometimes by accident.
Like you might be demo'ing a plug in and use it in a way I have never thought of, and although I don;t have that plugin , I have something similar, these kinds of things, as well as actual deliberate tips. Thanks to all of you for your great information
Just took “Guitar EQ” course at Kohle Audio Kult, Kristian is talking about in this video! Really wonderful course! Just in 1 hour Kristian opened my eyes how I should EQ metal guitars in the right way because I’m still learning all about mixing metal and stuff! Thank you so much Kristian for creating this course! Kohle Audio Kult is the best place to be for all metal sound engineers! Super happy to be a part of such a wonderful community! Learning much from Kristian and other great mentors at the academy!
I use chorus on my metal guitar tracks. The 80s called me and they wanted their tone back, but I said "no I am keeping it, thank you." and hung up. True story!
😂
Fucking hilarious
Hello fellow chorus abuser!
Chuck Schuldiner of Death used it pretty regularly on leads and occasionally clean parts.
For real? You aren’t kidding? That’s so cool. I wish they would call me cause i’ve got the perfect response. 😉
I've been using EQ for years and this was pretty eye opening, It's always been such a norm to choke out the top frequencies rather than just bringing them down gently. Amazing stuff! Definitely subbed
Welcome!
The only reason I use compression (actually a dynamic EQ) on heavy guitars is to attenuate rumble during the palm mutes, mostly around 100-150 hz. Adds no color and is completely transparent.
Me too. But that’s a different story!
Good technical use of compression.
Ahhhhh a fellow Andy Sneap-ite I see
Genius idea of “removing frequencies” that cover up the core of the sound, rather than trying to boost stuff which ends up sounding unnatural at that point. Love this channel.
That’s the best way of EQing guitars. Boosting can sound artificially prett quickly
Yes, i use the eq‘s on this way. Also on bass and other. The only right way is to experiment with all possibilitys, to find the best tone that i want in this situation. 🤘
This video has been a gamechanger for my tones, used to really struggle with getting that brightness without having it hisss like crazy. Awesome tips!
Thanks! Check out the full course! Pretty good investment ;)
This has completely changed my equalizing thinking. I can’t wait to try this! Thank you!
This video dropped as I was talking to a friend about how my new guitar sounds too 'hissy' and 'airy' on the top end in a mix. I never thought to EQ it that severely, but as I'm finding out more and more its about trusting your ears over "This is how its done and how it should always be done!"
Your friend called me and asked for a quick video! 🤪
One of the tricks I use on heavy guitars is hipassing and then shelving the high end, which achieves a better roll-off and just seems to work on every rythm guitar track.
Great trick I discovered by tweaking harsh IRs I've got in my Axe FX. It really tamed those annoying highs, and used with a multiband compressor focused on low/low mids, I'm really happy with the tones I get!
I spent 15k about 15 years ago to learn the art of recording. Using HP and LP filters like this was never taught to me. I feel cheated haha. Anyway, this was very eye opening for me. Went back and tweaked some of my recent mixes and the difference was night and day. I am seriously thinking about your upcoming course. Thanks Kohl.
Thanks man! The KOHLE AUDIO KULT is coming soon!
ME TWO...15 years ago...lars los angle
Hey man, so I take it you are a producer full-time? Do you have any advice for a 21-year-old music major senior who also wants to be a producer full-time?
@@ericdehaeseleer6200 It's a hobby and a passion. Have been writing songs all my life. Spent my 20's and 30's burning the midnight oil in the Seattle/Tacoma metal scene. 3 years ago, I decided it was time to get a small studio going and really get good at tracking and mixing.
@@RyvenProductions Thanks for the reply! Would you say that the 15k you spent was worth it? I'm looking at a school in Arizona that costs 18k after I get my bachelor's and I'd like to hear your thoughts on spending that kind of money to learn about production
Ive been using pro-q 3 and Low and High Freq cutting for years, but i usually cut at like 15k with a 36db curve, and then spend the next 2 hours trying to remove the high end buzz using a bell curve,.....after watching this my mind is blown as to how simple it could have been and how ive been making it more complicated! thank you!
Just tried this on some guitar tracks I had in an open project. It's far more effective than what I had been doing and easier to dial in. Thanks for the tip!
Great to hear that! Stay tuned for more.
This is a common "problem" with modelers. Many people think they are all harsh. But they are generally modeling the fizz of a real close miced rig. This technique is almost a must in that world. Great job!
Going to try this out today! Thanks for reaffirming my suspicions of using a more gentle EQ on the highs. Great expose on the topic!
Source Guitar: EMG 81 > Tube Screamer > Three Channel Dual Rectifier CRANKED treble and presence > Chinese V30 2x12 > SM57 dead center.
brilliant, clear, practical info man thank you so much. This unlocked a recording door for me especially with vst you legend \m/
You’re welcome! Stay tuned!
Well, damn. This was a lot more effective than I thought. I already rolled off the low end, but rolling off the highs like that opened space for vocals and solos in a way I hadn't anticipated. I thought I'd miss that crisp attack in the guitars, but they sat great in the mix. Cheers!
Does madness influence a tight heavy metal mix by any chance? I find that the two goes hand in hand, usually.
Sounds amazing with a slower slope
I do use low and high pass but didn’t know how to bring out tonality. Phenomenal. Thank you
You’re welcome!
Check out the full course. There’s more to learn!
Where have you been all my life?! I've been playing for 36 years and although I've managed to track some really great guitar sounds with budget equipment I've always been mesmerized by songs with blistering heavy guitars... high gain, overdrive, distortion etc but without the noisy part of the distortion. I couldn't figure it out. And this video answered a decades long mystery for me in 8 mins 34 sec. Thank you so much! 🤘🤪🤘
its amazing how much tighter the tone is when you cut that fizz out
Going to use this in the mix I'm working on right now. 🤘 My mixes just keep getting better thanks to you, Bobby Huff, and Jordan Valeriote.
I love how the amp heads are lone and stacked in the control room like that and just routed to a cab(s) in a live room/iso booth. Pretty ingenious and super practical/effiicient for choosing an amp(s), dialing in the tone, and - most importantly - looks cool af. 🤘
Very good idea. Immediately made sense and knew where this was going, but hadn’t thought of it myself. Ppl use all kinds of tools for that, C4 & multiband comp, even the plugin soothe 2 to remove unwanted high end…
Yes sir! I've found this to be a great way to fix tones up. I tend to boost some 700-ish Hz, possibly something around 1.6k, high cut filter and often a DeEsser around 4k as well to smooth out the tone and make it far more focused and detailed. Then thanks to your info, bass goes above and below the guitar in specific frequency ranges.
Provided you can find a frequency for the instrument, it will always be heard :) Love your videos!
Great tip. I always go to the filters first.
Great info top to bottom. Rule number one is get it sounding amazing while recording, so it doesn't require a lot of fixing in the first place, so I'm glad you mention that. And I love the idea of not just cutting off high frequencies aggressively, but using a gradual filter slope to get rid of the really high stuff, but easing off the frequencies right below it.
Great to hear you liked it!
I do use compressors on heavy guitars, but more to shape the attack envelope, sometimes before the amp and sometimes after. You can also some sidechaining tricks that I like to use sometimes.
This for me was an "before after". Now I can get more natural tone and sit my gitars better in the mix. Thank you!
When i did my guitars i did the slope of the high cut mild on accident more like the 12 db/oct. I didn't know how to use the controls of my eq until a few days ago to make it steeper. This is a great video
Absolutely loved this, thank you for the real time examples and audible outcomes ❤
Similar can be achieved by reducing presence on the amp. Or increasing presence but reducing highs, while adjusting the gain appropriately. The same applies to the low end.
I don’t think it was mentioned but this is a VERY good quality idea brought forward for general recording purposes. When you mix this condensed/compressed signal in a full band setting with other tracks, you’re going to have SO MUCH MORE CLARITY in your recording. The less busy your full spectrum EQ frequency is during a playback the better your mix will sound. You don’t want a ton of things stacked in the same frequency range if possible because it becomes cluttered and your ears simply cannot pick out the details. He talks very much around this point but in case you didn’t pick up on it thats the fact. Take it toward all of your recording efforts. You can use this methodology for vocals, bass, etc and apply it to help eliminate wasted music information and eliminate a lot of post-processing work on your mixing efforts to get this all to blend properly. Great tutorial!
Very true that. When we found that out for our sound it changed a lot. Thanks for the content 🤘😎
I mix mostly in ableton and I find the very simple Channel EQ to be a great starting point on every track. You can do so much with just that one effect. It's worth CONSIDERING highpassing and lowpassing almost every track, I'm not saying to do it, but to consider how it could benefit each track. Use your ears!
I generally don't use low pass filtering, but I am intrigued by it and am looking to see what it will bring to the party.
I have definitely endlessly EQ notched poorly dialled in guitar tones many times. Looking forward to the full academy! 😎
This is the best explanation of EQs I've ever seen!
Clear and understandable for anyone even for someone like me!
Christian good job and thank you!
Thanks man!
There will be a lot more like this.
Negative EQing in a live environment really helps in the same way. Make the mike pick up the frequency of the drum/cabinet/source and not other unwanted frequencies.
Man you helped me a lot, I've been looking a tutorial like this in youtube and very hard for me to find this. please continue more tutorial please.
Thanks! Check out my academy Kohle Audio Kult. That's where you find tons of courses!
So once again, removing unwanted frequencies makes room for the wanted ones. Old story, but never thought it would actually refine the tone so much. I tried it immediately on a guitar bus, and boy oh boy, genius! Thank you for this video.
This is why... If you get the Vfe Standout, get the 2020 version because you have independent switches for the low and high pass filters. The earlier version only has one switch which affects both filters the same.
WOW what a great demonstration. I hadn’t considered using a low pass filter in this way but it makes perfect sense and makes an ENORMOUS difference. THIS will be my guitar EQ strategy from now on!
Make sure you get the full EQ course!
It’s gonna be released with the launch of my academy in two weeks!
Thanks for this.
I'm usually more aggressive with the filters and never question why I do it in a certain way.
Deffinetely trying it with a more gentle curve in the future.
The man with no hair got rid of the unwanted hair with the hi pass filter. Nice. Thx. Great video!
Yeah! As you can see I have used a lot of filters in my life 😮💨😁
i always use the filters on the SSL channel plugin. stops me from overthinking the slope. guitar tones were still good before anyone could see the EQ on a graph.
i do this all the time with my fractal fm3, high cut and low cut on the cab block, to remove the bass rumble and harshness high
Yessir!! This ole dog learned a new trick for sure!! Can't get over how effective such a simple move was!!
Check out the full course and learn even more!
www.kohleaudiokult.com
Yeah good info. I use the same thing. Good idea to alter the slope of the LPF.
You've just solved so many questions for me In a short space of time. Thank you
I also like to compare hp/lp filters with shelving filters doing the same job. And pretty often I choose shelves, depending on the source material and context of course.
This is one of the first EQ videos that the difference is really obvious and mindblowing. Thanks for this, will certainly look out for your courses!
Thanks man!
This is a "no bullshit" channel. Stay tuned!
That's really cool! I'm always using a very steep filter... so now it will be great to try those other ways.
Trying this now, you and another channel I just watched for mastering. Thanks bro
Enjoy! 🤘❤️
This is actually a real Help, I am in the final stages of finishing the mixing on my Album, and I am in the "revision" stage, and Guitar Low pass filters is on the "to do list" for double checking.
I have actually used a lesser slope before on other things , but I dont tend to use it on Guitars (purely because I can be a plank sometimes and have not tried more than maybe once when I knew far less).
I think this video will prompt me to check each heavy guitar track/bus and try some less extreme filter curves ( I use TDR Nova in reaper, as it has different filter slopes and dynamic eq like Fab Filter, so its also great with Palm Mutes) A few of my track shave issues with the hi end on the guitars being a bit too bitey and/or fizzy but its not something that sounds good notched out, so this is a great way to solve that issue.
Thanks for a cool tip, this one is brilliantly timed, as tomorrow, I am going through my album and hopefully doing the final tweaks
Many thanks
:D
That amp/cab/mic setup just sounded downright fantastic tho. Damn dude.
that fizz up there is also masking the cymbals in a mix...so cleaning up like that lets the cymbals pop out clearer without having to crank them :)
Indeed!
The thing for me is, listening to guitar tone out of mix contest is always going to sound too fizzy - until I start cutting it. I did a lot of similar mistakes often, these days I'm way more conservative about cutting high end too much, because I'm cutting a lot of harmonics that are people used to and can perceive guitar as cutting through mix better (get's more audible without being louder). I used to cut everything above 5khz, but these days I moved it a bit higher to 8-9khz and conservative slope. Again, as always, key is to listen in the context of the mix. When playing alone - I def cut a lot of highs more, they get fatiguing a lot faster, but in the mix context, a lot more masking happens and harmonics mix, so you don't get that same feeling.
Of course you should do the final moves in the mix context.
For tutorials like this it is better to hear things soloed to understand what I’m talking about.
This was really helpful. I never really considered HPF that way. Thanks!
I have used high cut filters like that for guitars and other instruments as well. Sometimes even cymbals that have too much bight on the high end to smooth them out
super agree about getting it as good as you can with no eq to start with! if you have to do extreme eq curves it always winds up sounding more like noise and less musical, you know, boxy, airy in a bad way, I mean its good to sprinkle in a bit of "processed" or "low fi" here and there to keep things interesting, BUT "processed/low fi" is not good for an always-on effect. I find it is generally better if you can keep it flat(ish) between 100HZ to 6-7Khz
The less EQ the better on distorted guitars. You’re right about that
Can't wait to get the course when you get it done.
That's like a smooth Chevelle guitar tone. I like it a lot
I really enjoy learning new techniques from people who use actual audio terminology to describe whats going on i.e. "Definition" "Sizzle" as opposed to "This sounds hairy" or " this tone has so much spank.
Awesome! I always though I cut too much, but as the cymbals have space then I didn't mind.
Best EQing metal guitar video I've ever seen. Looking for the full course.
I use an Empress ParaEQ in my loop of my Mesa Nomad100 as a global eq. I got the idea from playing thru Mesa JP2C which was too expensive for me. I can use it to adjust for different guitars. Works great.
What you say at about 1:35 just earned a subscription from me.
First time I'm seeing a video from you, too.
Awesome and informative as always !! 🤘🏼 we need more IRs Kristian !!
In the works!
I use to do that because my ears take me to that. More natural. Sound good.
Yes I have used the high cut, I found it by accident. My EQ has a plateau setting that automatically put it in.
I think I’m one of those who does the opposite, I like to bring out some sizzle and a brutal mid section instead, I do cut a little high and some low to let the symbols and bass/kick breath, but I still want sizzle and fuzz to define the sound for clarity “not same clarity you’re used to” but I do after all use my Mesa boogie road king and love the way it sounds, I don’t want to take it away. But that’s a flavour I arrived at 10 years into recording and mixing, I just want to say that the lower you tune your guitars the more you EQ you’ll cut to make it clean, so also try the opposite in other than B tuning LOL
I suspect that the high cut filter in the cab block of my Helix works exactly like you are showing - not too steep and gentle.
I usually use the 6db cut when I'm I'm doing drums
Cheers for the tips, i just started producing music in home studio and so confused about EQ-ing the high gain part.
Check out my academy if you wanna learn more! This video is a part of a full guitar EQing course there.🤘❤️
www.kohleaudiokult.com/
How can your channel have only 37k subscribers? This was a real gem of a help and I'm gonna try it later today with my own guitar and plug-ins. Gonna check your other videos as well. Thank you so much!
Welcome and thanks!
Spread the word! 🤘
You will always be my favorite engineer on RUclips
Great video. I typically use 12dB or 18dB filters. When you switch to 12dB per octave and slide it down (about 6:36) is beautiful. Then you bypass and all the fizz comes through - great illustration. Great vid and great channel!
Thanks man! Welcome!
Wow!! Great info here I never considered! Thanks for sharing!!
Sehr nices Tutorial, danke!
i thought i knew how to high cut nope i just learned it now nobody told like this way thank you very much
Thank you so much, Kohle. Super helpful video! I really like your content, will definitely check out your academy
That is an amazing guitar sound! Great advice, thank you. 🤟🏻
I would also use notch bells to reduce resonances between 2.5k to 6k
I have always done this. Guitars always sound harsh to me, so I soften it with eq.
Works so good just tried it THANKS MAN!
Great video! Very interesting information! I’ll try this
EQ it before it is recorded. You would be amazed at what a multi band EQ in the loop can do for your tone.
This is good stuff. It almost sounds like the guitar tone gets a tiny bit “thicker” when removing the high freq 👍🏼
Yes, because cutting one frequency "boosts" the others.
Kohle, Du machst mich fertig! Wie geil ist das bitte!? Gekauft!
Thx for your efforts and knowledge you sharing with us! Stay Metal!
Danke für dieses tolle Video! Gleich bock auszutesten
Great stuff man. Thanks.
That's some great use of a LPF!
I love fright box studio !
Very instructive and helpful, thanks !
I used something similar on overheads for drums. Removing some real harsh stuff. However, this was like nine years ago, and I now realize that I took out too much with the hi-pass filter. Probably had some clipping issues as well, at least on one track.