splitting bassline
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splitting bassline
Hey all,
So I'm wanting to split up a bassline I have into low,mid, and high frequencies. I understand there are a couple ways to do this (multiband compressor, rack + filters) . I decided to try the bass split chorus audio effect rack and it seems to be working well. But after having a look at my spectrum analyzer I see that there are two big notches out of the bassline where the low-mid and mid-high crossovers occur.
I want to manipulate the the low-mid-high section of the bassline, but dont want it all notched out.
So I'm wanting to split up a bassline I have into low,mid, and high frequencies. I understand there are a couple ways to do this (multiband compressor, rack + filters) . I decided to try the bass split chorus audio effect rack and it seems to be working well. But after having a look at my spectrum analyzer I see that there are two big notches out of the bassline where the low-mid and mid-high crossovers occur.
I want to manipulate the the low-mid-high section of the bassline, but dont want it all notched out.
Re: splitting bassline
ummm...well. uhhh. can't even describe how fucking insane this is. 

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Re: splitting bassline
I saw a little trick that might help you here. Create an effect rack with 3 layers in and put a multiband compressor in each layer. In the first layer solo the highs, in the second solo the mid and in the third solo the low. Now you'll have your bass split up and the crossover points should be spot on (as I'm sure ableton put a lot of time and effort into making sure they are seamless).
Hope this helps.
Hope this helps.
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- Posts: 82
- Joined: Sun Feb 20, 2011 9:43 am
Re: splitting bassline
+1puzzlefactory wrote:I saw a little trick that might help you here. Create an effect rack with 3 layers in and put a multiband compressor in each layer. In the first layer solo the highs, in the second solo the mid and in the third solo the low. Now you'll have your bass split up and the crossover points should be spot on (as I'm sure ableton put a lot of time and effort into making sure they are seamless).
Hope this helps.
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Re: splitting bassline
i tried this for S&G. worked like a charm! thanks puzzle factory!
Re: splitting bassline
Here's a video that explains how to do this in detail:
http://www.quantizecourses.com/pages.php/?p=895
I've been using this approach but it does seem to color the sound a little bit. Where are you guys setting your low and high cut points?
Does anybody have any other favorite approaches to isolating the mid frequencies for effects?
http://www.quantizecourses.com/pages.php/?p=895
I've been using this approach but it does seem to color the sound a little bit. Where are you guys setting your low and high cut points?
Does anybody have any other favorite approaches to isolating the mid frequencies for effects?
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- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 5:41 pm
Re: splitting bassline
You can also use a rack with three chains of EQ3. Of course EQ3 is not transparent, but you may like it. With the 24dB slope and some overlap, there shouldn't be any notching. If you want more transparency, you could try the same thing with EQ8 or a VST EQ of your choosing.
Re: splitting bassline
I've been looking at these racks and admit I don't understand why it would be considered more effective than using the multiband compressor approach (if you only need three bands like I am using).hdrpbx wrote:this is all you need
http://rhythminmind.net/1313/?p=43
4 bands transparent splitter rack
Also, could you explain the difference between the regular and 24db version of these racks?
Thanks!
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Re: splitting bassline
EQ3 gives you two options for slope at the cutoff: 48 or 24 dB per octave. So 24 is more gradual, while 48 is more of a Sharp cutoff. In EQ8 you have more control by using the Q value.djspirit wrote:I've been looking at these racks and admit I don't understand why it would be considered more effective than using the multiband compressor approach (if you only need three bands like I am using).hdrpbx wrote:this is all you need
http://rhythminmind.net/1313/?p=43
4 bands transparent splitter rack
Also, could you explain the difference between the regular and 24db version of these racks?
Thanks!
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Re: splitting bassline
Soloing the bands in the multi-band compressor isn't transparent. These where created with transparency in mind. The 12&24db reference the filter slope.djspirit wrote:
I've been looking at these racks and admit I don't understand why it would be considered more effective than using the multiband compressor approach (if you only need three bands like I am using).
Also, could you explain the difference between the regular and 24db version of these racks?
Thanks!
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Re: splitting bassline
Thanks Rhythm Mind!rhythminmind wrote:Soloing the bands in the multi-band compressor isn't transparent. These where created with transparency in mind. The 12&24db reference the filter slope.djspirit wrote:
I've been looking at these racks and admit I don't understand why it would be considered more effective than using the multiband compressor approach (if you only need three bands like I am using).
Also, could you explain the difference between the regular and 24db version of these racks?
Thanks!
I'm a newbie and don't know what you mean by transparent. Please provide a quick explanation and what advantage it offers? Also, someone wrote a comment on this page on your web site identifying a bug, "in the 24 db freq dividers the low mid and low x-over chains are swapped at the output, means only wrong named but causes little bit confusion which is the low mid and the low". Are you going to release a fix for that? Also, he asks you to explain the advantage of the 24db dividers.
Thanks so much for your work and help with this!
Re: splitting bassline
wow, I never realised just how much the Multiband Dynamics plugin colors the signal! I always presumed that it would be flat.