[NEW RELEASE] LACOSTE - RV50 SNAKE
Inspired by the Revan series, the RV50 features a classic tennis upper, with faux snake skin, nubuck and leather panels. The younger brother to the Lacoste Tennis Mid Snake, this little cobra has dope detailing at the toe box, with Nash - inspired stitching and a sleek stylised silhoutte. Ace!
Compression
Compressing your mix makes the individual tracks take up less (dynamic) space without losing their sonic impact. As you begin your mix, start conservatively with your compressor settings: the attack and release should be relatively fast, set the ratio at 2:1 or 3:1, and set the threshold so that only the peaks are getting over the top and being "squeezed." You've probably heard the phrase, "Punchy Mix." Stereo compression is a key element in making your mix more "punchy." EQ'ing the stereo buss - the two wires that funnel all the various sounds from your mixing console to your 2-track recorder - is generally discouraged. Since this eq affects the entire signal, from your bass guitar to your lead vocal and everything else in the mix, you're likely to affect some sounds you didn't intend to. For example, if you decide that the mix is lacking bottom end, try adding a little here and there (on the bass, the kick, toms or whatever needs it).
If you add bottom end to the whole mix, you're also adding to the vocal, the cymbals, percussion, etc. It's best to leave such overall eq'ing to the mastering engineer, who doesn't have the luxury of addressing individual tracks, but has trained his ears specifically for the art of overall eq. EQ'ing the stereo buss - the two wires that funnel all the various sounds from your mixing console to your 2-track recorder - is generally discouraged. Since this eq affects the entire signal, from your bass guitar to your lead vocal and everything else in the mix, you're likely to affect some sounds you didn't intend to.
For example, if you decide that the mix is lacking bottom end, try adding a little here and there (on the bass, the kick, toms or whatever needs it). If you add bottom end to the whole mix, you're also adding to the vocal, the cymbals, percussion, etc. It's best to leave such overall eq'ing to the mastering engineer, who doesn't have the luxury of addressing individual tracks, but has trained his ears specifically for the art of overall eq.
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