Someone brought this up on instagram, so now I'm curious how things overlap.
There is no "I just like answering polls" option here because, as a good scientist, I don't want to deal with junk data. Please reblog for a larger sample size!
I'm so telling everyone who will listen about how important and paradoxically effective it can be to pay attention to the 600-800Hz range when mixing voiceover, music or sound design
This is subjective but I've noticed that 600 sounds much higher up the spectrum to me and it used to confuse me so much when I'd go for like 2500 or something and it wouldn't change the part of the sound I was hearing
Anyway turns out 600-800Hz plays a huge role in the kind of closed up, small space, intimate sound and it can either make things sound rich and round or it can make things sound too loud and too present in a mix, and as always it's a balancing act
i love you musicians i love you singers i love guitarists i love you bassists i love you drummers I love you trumpeters i love you tromboners i love you celloists i love you music producers i love you music arrangers i love you music composers i love you songwriters I love you digital audio workstations i love you humans for expressing ourselves through sound