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Help with box tuning
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8747810" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>I have songs that naturally play in the 20's. I don't have that music on this PC, it's on my old laptop, because I don't have a stereo in my car or drive much, so I don't have it off hand. I had all my songs in a bass list back in the day, I had sometimes a special list for 20's and 30's songs. There's a lot of rap producers that will slip 20 hz notes in songs and a lot of people have no idea they are there because they hit the HPF/subsonic crossovers.</p><p></p><p>Don't let your music tastes determine tuning for others. Most bass happens in the 40's and 50's if you're old lol. Jk, that's kind of what it feels like. I listen to a ton of electronic music that has a ton of 30's in it. I have rap songs from the early 2000's with bass sweeps that go down to 14 hz lol, I know that because I used to run songs through audacity for non-clipped bass songs for demoing for hours. I used to also slow my own songs. Idk if you think I'm an idiot or lying, but I literally have looked at waveforms of songs to see if the bass is clipped. I know exactly what frequencies people play and what songs are what, brah.</p><p></p><p>There's nothing wrong with re-mixed music, slowed music, whatever. None of what you said isn't a good reason not to tune low. People need to tune based around what they do.</p><p></p><p>Audio just isn't about playing music man, it's about having fun. Sometimes experimenting with the 20's is super fun to people. I have competitors that I design for that do 158's in the 20's dude. For competition. Idk if you're out of the loop, but that's a way to compete now in some places is to play super low on music and that's part of the score factoring. And it's f*cking awesome and super challenging to do well and that's exactly why we try to do it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8747810, member: 591582"] I have songs that naturally play in the 20's. I don't have that music on this PC, it's on my old laptop, because I don't have a stereo in my car or drive much, so I don't have it off hand. I had all my songs in a bass list back in the day, I had sometimes a special list for 20's and 30's songs. There's a lot of rap producers that will slip 20 hz notes in songs and a lot of people have no idea they are there because they hit the HPF/subsonic crossovers. Don't let your music tastes determine tuning for others. Most bass happens in the 40's and 50's if you're old lol. Jk, that's kind of what it feels like. I listen to a ton of electronic music that has a ton of 30's in it. I have rap songs from the early 2000's with bass sweeps that go down to 14 hz lol, I know that because I used to run songs through audacity for non-clipped bass songs for demoing for hours. I used to also slow my own songs. Idk if you think I'm an idiot or lying, but I literally have looked at waveforms of songs to see if the bass is clipped. I know exactly what frequencies people play and what songs are what, brah. There's nothing wrong with re-mixed music, slowed music, whatever. None of what you said isn't a good reason not to tune low. People need to tune based around what they do. Audio just isn't about playing music man, it's about having fun. Sometimes experimenting with the 20's is super fun to people. I have competitors that I design for that do 158's in the 20's dude. For competition. Idk if you're out of the loop, but that's a way to compete now in some places is to play super low on music and that's part of the score factoring. And it's f*cking awesome and super challenging to do well and that's exactly why we try to do it. [/QUOTE]
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