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Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes
Episode 2506

Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes

Making a Scene Presents - Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes

Making a Scene Presents

April 1, 202622m 24s

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Show Notes

Making a Scene Presents - Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes

There is a reason so many home studio mixes sound busy, cloudy, and weirdly tired even when every track is “exciting” on its own. It is not always the mic. It is not always the room. It is not always that you need some expensive boutique plugin blessed by a guy on YouTube wearing a beanie in July. A lot of the time, the problem is simpler and a little more humbling. We boost before we listen. We decorate before we clean. We keep reaching for more when the track is begging for less. That is where subtractive EQ comes in, and it is why this one move can make a mix feel more expensive, more open, and more professional without adding a single new sound. Fender Studio Pro is built on the Studio One platform, and Fender’s current Studio Pro pages describe its Standard EQ as a parametric EQ with dynamic EQ and visual feedback, while the platform also includes broader mix tools like multiband dynamics and a modernized workflow in version 8. That makes it a very good place to learn restraint instead of hype.

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Topics

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