I find spectrum analyzers most useful when designing instruments or sounds and something audibly noticeable is occurring but the source of which is not immediately known. unwanted noise, artifacts, phasing, etc...
Otherwise it is great to space out to when you are at that point in your day.
spectrum analyser
Re: spectrum analyser
Ableton’s engineers are hard
at work developing code that will allow our software to predict the future, but we don’t
anticipate having this available until at least the next major release.
at work developing code that will allow our software to predict the future, but we don’t
anticipate having this available until at least the next major release.
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Re: spectrum analyser
very cool use..
been messing with it today the 'wedge shape' comment was most useful, and looking what a good track looks like, thx all...
been messing with it today the 'wedge shape' comment was most useful, and looking what a good track looks like, thx all...
Re: spectrum analyser
I strongly use it after a compressor with side chain.
Or on some sounds I wanna be sure of the freq range.
Always the before - after thing to check the efficiency of an FX
Or on some sounds I wanna be sure of the freq range.
Always the before - after thing to check the efficiency of an FX
Re: spectrum analyser
this I understand: see what a well mixed track looks like in spectrum, but this obviously very specific for that track, is it not?
I have a very hard time using spectrum, it all seems a bunch of wrigly lines and bars to me, even if I carve out a band with EQ8 from a distorted guitartrack it hardly makes a difference in the spectrum of that individual track. I know EQ8 can cut a max of 16dB but it makes a big difference in sound, it just doesn't show in spectrum.
btw what I would like is a spectrumanalyzer on the master showing the graphs of all individual tracks in a different colour.
ah, found voxengo glissEQ
I have a very hard time using spectrum, it all seems a bunch of wrigly lines and bars to me, even if I carve out a band with EQ8 from a distorted guitartrack it hardly makes a difference in the spectrum of that individual track. I know EQ8 can cut a max of 16dB but it makes a big difference in sound, it just doesn't show in spectrum.
btw what I would like is a spectrumanalyzer on the master showing the graphs of all individual tracks in a different colour.
ah, found voxengo glissEQ
Last edited by rdevries on Mon Oct 31, 2011 3:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: spectrum analyser
I use it to check what frequency range any of my sounds are in so I can add sounds in ranges that have none. Keeps things unmuddled...