Intro to SubBass in Final Cut Pro for Mac
The SubBass effect generates frequencies below those of the original signal, resulting in artificial bass content.
The simplest use for SubBass is as an octave divider, similar to octaver effect pedals for electric bass guitars. Whereas such pedals can only process a monophonic input sound source of clearly defined pitch, SubBass can be used with complex summed signals as well.
SubBass creates two bass signals, derived from two separate portions of the incoming signal. These are defined with the High and Low parameters. See SubBass controls in Final Cut Pro for Mac.
WARNING: Using SubBass can produce extremely loud output signals. Choose moderate monitoring levels, and only use loudspeakers that are actually capable of reproducing the very low frequencies produced. Never try to force a loudspeaker to output these frequency bands with an EQ.
SubBass is unlike a pitch shifter in that the waveform of the signal generated by SubBass is not based on the waveform of the input signal, but is sinusoidal—that is, it uses a sine wave. Given that pure sine waves rarely sit well in complex arrangements, you can control the amount of—and balance between—the generated and original signals with the Wet and Dry sliders.
Use the High and Low controls to define the two frequency bands, which SubBass uses to generate tones. High Center and Low Center define the center frequency of each band, and High Bandwidth and Low Bandwidth define the width of each frequency band.
The High Ratio and Low Ratio knobs define the transposition amount for the generated signal in each band. This is expressed as a ratio of the original signal. For example, a Ratio setting of 2 transposes the signal down one octave.
Important: Within each frequency band, the filtered signal should have a reasonably stable pitch in order to be analyzed correctly.
In general, narrow bandwidths produce the best results, because they avoid unwanted intermodulations. Set High Center a fifth higher than Low Center, which means a factor of 1.5 for the center frequency. Derive the sub-bass to be synthesized from the existing bass portion of the signal, and transpose by one octave in both bands (by setting Ratio to 2). Do not overdrive the process or you will introduce distortion. If you hear frequency gaps, move one or both Center frequency knobs, or widen the Bandwidth setting of one or both frequency ranges a little.
Tip: Be prudent when using SubBass, and compare the extreme low-frequency content of your mixes with that of other productions. It is very easy to go overboard with it.
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