Message |
Subject:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| Hey everyone. I'm new to Studio One and have had it about a week and find it the most enjoyable DAW I've ever used. I am trying the free version out and have already decided to buy it as soon as I can afford to. It may be a little while before I can afford it. Anyway my question is about a high pass filter. How can I apply a high pass filter in the free version? If there is not a way to do it I may turn on the 30 day trial of the full version but I was kinda waiting to do that until I feel more comfortable using the new software so I know what I'm doing when I start the trial. I know there is no support for the free version but thought I'd ask in the forums. Thank you Marc |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
Mr Fab Presonic Joined: 30/12/2012 22:53:15 Messages: 179 Location: Paris France Offline
| I suppose the free version offers the 'basic' Presonus Pro EQ (which is excellent and neutral). You'll find low and high pass filters with different slopes available included in this plug. It's my first choice when I need to clean the low or top end from rumble or hiss. |
Mr Fab de Paris Studio one 2.6.2 Pro. Dell inspiron 17 windows 7 64bits UVI Sparkverb Audiobox 22 VSL Antelope audio Zodiac+ with Voltikus Sennheiser HD600 Audio Technica ATH M 50 AESD monitor 6 + bass 10 class A multi-amplified system
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Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| Mr Fab wrote:I suppose the free version offers the 'basic' Presonus Pro EQ (which is excellent and neutral). You'll find low and high pass filters with different slopes available included in this plug. It's my first choice when I need to clean the low or top end from rumble or hiss.
Thank you very much for your reply. I'm just learning. been recording bad tracks for years so I'm trying to learn a little more now. I'll try that out. I read you can use an EQ but I didn't know if it really had the same effect as what I am trying to do with the low pass. Guess it's obvious to you guys that know what your doing. haha |
Subject:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| High pass filter I meant.. |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
matthewgorman Presonoid Joined: 24/02/2011 21:30:31 Messages: 3219 Location: Somewhere in the swamps of Jersey. Offline
| What are you trying to do? Free does not include Pro EQ, you would need to use the channel strip. I can't remember off the top of my head if the channel strip has a high pass. Look for a button/knob for low cut, it may be called that. This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 13/06/2014 18:04:36 |
Matt Lenovo Thinkpad E520, Windows 7 64bt, 8 GB RAM, Intel i5 Processor StarTech EC13942 34mm Expresscard http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16839158010&Tpk=startech%20EC13942 S1Pro V2 (Special Dog Balls Edition), Melodyne Editor, Nomad Factory Studio Bundle, Waves Renaissance Bundle, Firestudio Tube, Faderport, Monitor Station, HP4 Headphone Amp Yamaha HS50 Monitors. Shure Mics (57's, 58's, and a 1953 Unidyne), Various AKG, Various MXL Ribbon Mics. 1974 P-Bass, 1990 Jazz, 1985 Guild B302, Ampeg SVT with 4x10x15 cabinet http://soundcloud.com/stars_apart |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
cristofe Presonificator Joined: 12/03/2012 21:10:44 Messages: 3628 Location: Skaneateles, NY USA Offline
| I know there is no support for the free version but thought I'd ask in the forums.
While their is no official tech support for free you can get lots of help here. S1 Free actually has it's own forum. You may get more/better responses posting there: http://forumsarchive.presonus.com/forums/show/48.page |
PC'S: HP XW6000 Dual 3.2GHz Intel Xeon Processors, 8GB RAM WinXP SP2 HP 6005 Pro AMD Athalon X2 B24 3.0Ghz Processor, 4GB RAM Win8 Pro HP Compaq NC6320 Laptop Intel Core2Duo 2.0Ghz Processor 3GB RAM Win7 Ult Dell Latitude E4310 Laptop Intel i5 2.67Ghz Processor 4GB RAM Win7 Pro x32 Audio Interfaces: Terratec EWS88MT PCI (2), Audiobox 1818VSL USB & FP10 Firewire, Steinberg MI4 USB, Line 6 Toneport GX & PodXT, Roland GS-10, NI Rig Kontrol 3 Monitors: Yamaha HS50M's DAWS/VST Hosts: S1 Professional, Plogue Bidule, Xlutop Chainer, Sieb VSTHost & Savihost Hardware Synthesizers: Roland SH-32 & XV-3080 RedSound Darkstar XP2, Novation X-Station, Yamaha AN200, M-Audio Venom Hardware Controllers: JL Cooper CS-10 Control Surface, Yamaha EZ-EG, Dillion Les Paul style acoustic electric guitar with Roland GK-3 pickup and GI-20 converter. The Rest: Guitars, Amps, Stompboxes, Mics, Outboard Gear, VST plugins..too much to list! |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| matthewgorman wrote:What are you trying to do? Free does not include Pro EQ, you would need to use the channel strip. I can't remember off the top of my head if the channel strip has a high pass. Look for a button/knob for low cut, it may be called that.
Now I feel like a complete idiot. Yeah there is LC button there. I'm just wanting to cut the low frequencies out that are not needed in the guitar and vocal parts. I read it can help the mix sound better. What would you recommend for the Hz on a guitar track for low cut? 70-80hz? again sorry guys I am new to anything other than capturing a track in a DAW..
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Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
Kiwicomposer Presonic Joined: 02/12/2011 15:38:39 Messages: 284 Location: Wellington, New Zealand Offline
| As Mathew said. The Free version does not come with the ProEQ plain . It has limited free plugins and you cat use 3rd party plugins. But it does come with the Presonus Channel Strip Plugin and you can use the Low Cut ( Hi Pass) filter in that.
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This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 13/06/2014 18:49:58 |
Steve Currington de Composer Wellington, New Zealand Twitter: @kiwicomposer Facebook: kiwicomposer SkypeID: kiwicomposer ---------------------------------------- Primary Hardware: Presonus Studio One v2.6.2, Presonus Audiobox1818vsl, Presonus Audiobox USB, Presonus Faderport, Focusrite Liquid Saffire 56, MOTU Traveler Mk3, TC-Helicon VoiceworksPlus, FMR RNC, FMR RNLA, Axiom Pro 49 Keyboard, other sundry hardware, numerous mics, audio plugins and instruments. Primary Software: Sibelius v7.x, Notion v4.x, Logic Studio. V9.x., Melodyne Editor. Running on iMac's and MacBookAir with OSX 10.9.x Mavericks
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Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| Kiwicomposer wrote:As Mathew said. The Free version does not come with the ProEQ plain . It has limited free plugins and you cat use 3rd party plugins. But it does come with the Presonus Channel Strip Plugin and you can use the Low Cut ( Hi Pass) filter in that.
That's exactly what I need. Figures it was right in front of my face..hahaha Sweet. Thanks to everyone for the help. I can tell this is a great community here and look forward to spending some time here and in Studio One. |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
matthewgorman Presonoid Joined: 24/02/2011 21:30:31 Messages: 3219 Location: Somewhere in the swamps of Jersey. Offline
| Now I feel like a complete idiot. Yeah there is LC button there. I'm just wanting to cut the low frequencies out that are not needed in the guitar and vocal parts. I read it can help the mix sound better. What would you recommend for the Hz on a guitar track for low cut? 70-80hz? again sorry guys I am new to anything other than capturing a track in a DAW..
No need to feel like an idiot. We were all there once, and most people here remember that. There is no perfect setting for guitar, because it is going to depend on the song. 80 is a good start, but I have cut up to 250 if it needs it. When you mix, you need to decide what the dominant instrument needs to be in a certain frequency range, and reduce some of the other instruments in the same area. For example, a guitar will sound great soloed out and having freq around 100-120, but that is where the bass lives. Depending on the material, are you going to thin out the bass so the soloed guitar sounds great? Maybe , maybe not. There are many tools in the upgraded versions to help with you decision making in this area, PRO having the most. My guideline that i use is to cut out any frequencies on the low and high side that just aren't musical, and then mover forward. Pro Eq, which is availible as early as Artist, has a sidechain feature. This will let you put eq on say the guitar, and then feed the bass signal in for analysis. Then you can see the competing frequencies. A very valuable tool for someone just starting out. |
Matt Lenovo Thinkpad E520, Windows 7 64bt, 8 GB RAM, Intel i5 Processor StarTech EC13942 34mm Expresscard http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16839158010&Tpk=startech%20EC13942 S1Pro V2 (Special Dog Balls Edition), Melodyne Editor, Nomad Factory Studio Bundle, Waves Renaissance Bundle, Firestudio Tube, Faderport, Monitor Station, HP4 Headphone Amp Yamaha HS50 Monitors. Shure Mics (57's, 58's, and a 1953 Unidyne), Various AKG, Various MXL Ribbon Mics. 1974 P-Bass, 1990 Jazz, 1985 Guild B302, Ampeg SVT with 4x10x15 cabinet http://soundcloud.com/stars_apart |
Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
marcmckechnie Prenoob Joined: 13/06/2014 16:51:46 Messages: 6 Offline
| matthewgorman wrote:Now I feel like a complete idiot. Yeah there is LC button there. I'm just wanting to cut the low frequencies out that are not needed in the guitar and vocal parts. I read it can help the mix sound better. What would you recommend for the Hz on a guitar track for low cut? 70-80hz? again sorry guys I am new to anything other than capturing a track in a DAW..
No need to feel like an idiot. We were all there once, and most people here remember that. There is no perfect setting for guitar, because it is going to depend on the song. 80 is a good start, but I have cut up to 250 if it needs it. When you mix, you need to decide what the dominant instrument needs to be in a certain frequency range, and reduce some of the other instruments in the same area. For example, a guitar will sound great soloed out and having freq around 100-120, but that is where the bass lives. Depending on the material, are you going to thin out the bass so the soloed guitar sounds great? Maybe , maybe not. There are many tools in the upgraded versions to help with you decision making in this area, PRO having the most. My guideline that i use is to cut out any frequencies on the low and high side that just aren't musical, and then mover forward. Pro Eq, which is availible as early as Artist, has a sidechain feature. This will let you put eq on say the guitar, and then feed the bass signal in for analysis. Then you can see the competing frequencies. A very valuable tool for someone just starting out.
Allot of great info there. I know it's kind of a trial and error learning thing too. I can't wait to get the full version. I need to look into weather I want or need Artist or Pro. I would think Artist would be more than enough for a noob. I could afford Artist allot easier. I would like to get the package that has the interface mic and headphones with Stufio One Artist. My current gear is from about 2006 and I just used it to capture tracks and never really mixed it other than adjusting volume. One thing I have noticed is Studio One seems to have been designed very well with it's UI. Other than just the learning curve it seems to have a nice workflow. This so far has been the best DAW I have used and feel allot more comfortable using it.
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Subject:Re:High Pass Filter |
matthewgorman Presonoid Joined: 24/02/2011 21:30:31 Messages: 3219 Location: Somewhere in the swamps of Jersey. Offline
| Good luck, and ask plenty of questions |
Matt Lenovo Thinkpad E520, Windows 7 64bt, 8 GB RAM, Intel i5 Processor StarTech EC13942 34mm Expresscard http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16839158010&Tpk=startech%20EC13942 S1Pro V2 (Special Dog Balls Edition), Melodyne Editor, Nomad Factory Studio Bundle, Waves Renaissance Bundle, Firestudio Tube, Faderport, Monitor Station, HP4 Headphone Amp Yamaha HS50 Monitors. Shure Mics (57's, 58's, and a 1953 Unidyne), Various AKG, Various MXL Ribbon Mics. 1974 P-Bass, 1990 Jazz, 1985 Guild B302, Ampeg SVT with 4x10x15 cabinet http://soundcloud.com/stars_apart |