Andy, If you are hearing this "Sibilance" in connection with a file that does Not exhibit this sound when soloed, that means the "Silver", or hgh end sibilance is Not coming from that track, but Must be on another ttrack. I would suggest looking at the cymbal or high hat tracks ifyou have access to all the individual tracks to find the problem. If you do not have access to all the tracks, but are working with a pre-mixed stereo track, you could try some frequency specific limiting or some notch filter EQ, creating a notch just for that one freqeuncy range. It sounds like a pretty specific frequency content that is bothering you, so that might not affect the overall track. It might also create some more comfortable space at the top for the real vocal highs. Just a thought. Barry Michael -- In Logic_Cafe@yahoogroups.com, Andy Brook <bbgrove@...> wrote: > > I'm trying to mix vocals into a song and I can't seem to get rid of > some essing sounds, and what I can only describe as a sort of 'silver' > sound that comes and goes at various points. Anyone have any tips for > finding the source of the problem? Sorry to be so vague about how it > arises but I can't hear it on the clean unprocessed vocal line > > thanks in advance > > Andy B >
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Re: De Essing
2009-10-09 by BarryM
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