this isnt really true Tone, you can make a track sound much louder by cutting unnecessary sub frequencies.tone-def wrote:If you make cuts it will become quieter. Boost will make it louder.Mr Grey wrote:Cutting low f and removing mud making my track quieter?Torque wrote:There is absolutely no reason in the universe to do something like this for electronic music. Acoustic recordings a case could be made for doing it in certain limited situations but traditional recording sessions in an acoustic space have variables that can happen the a purely electronic instrument setup just wouldn't have. All you're doing is making your track quieter for no reason by killing off harmonics. It's just a bad idea.Mr Grey wrote:In my tracks, there are always hpf on master. But eq8 isn't best choice, it isn't so precise. I recomended Brickwall filters from iZotope Ozone 5 or VPS Philta (there's awsome freeware version of that plugin).
try an experiment, take a recording of a single instrument which doesnt have much in the way of sub freqeuncies, say an acoustic guitar, normalise it and compare it to say a well recorded normalised techno track, the acoustic guitar recording will sound massive and loud in comparison, and make the techno track sound really quiet.
sub frequencies take up huge amounts of space in your spectrum.
most mastering engineers will prefer to cut rather than boost frequencies to gain loudness.