Toms getting lost in the mix

apj

New member
Song I'm mixing down right now the toms are getting lost in the mix really badly. The cymbals and snare are right up there, the kick is in there but a little dampened and the toms are completely gone. Can I eq the drums differently somehow? I don't have tons of low end in the bass or guitar which to me would be what would be drowning the toms out no?
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

How did you mic the drums?

I do a lot of recording, I am sure I can help you out with this.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Go easy on the reverb treatment. Emphasise early reflections over the reverb "tail". Alternatively, apply gated reverb to the toms.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Are they on a separate track?
If so, it'll be easier. If they're all mixed going to 2 stereo tracks, you'll have to start with that mix.

Are they prevalent in the drum-only mix?


You don't really have to have too much lows in the guitar or bass to lose the toms, which are generally more low-mid to higher-lows, so it doesn't take much for a guitar or bass to drown them.

Try shifting the bass to a lower EQ without so much "Steve Harris tone" and your toms will probably reappear.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

if possible can you post the mix for us to listen to? I rarely apply eq to drums aside from some cut off on the super low end to keep things from getting messy. How were your drums recorded (mic placement, track allocations). Sometimes all you need to do is push the damn sliders up! ;)
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Another option would be to turn all of the percussion instruments that are "right up there" down a little bit. Bring the drums Group fader up slightly afterwards.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Another option would be to turn all of the percussion instruments that are "right up there" down a little bit. Bring the drums Group fader up slightly afterwards.

This is what we had to do on some of our tracks, balance the kit in the submix and then bring the whole kit up, adding the other instruments until we were happy with the overall sound.

All our drums each had a separate track, plus the overheads though.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Song I'm mixing down right now the toms are getting lost in the mix really badly. The cymbals and snare are right up there, the kick is in there but a little dampened and the toms are completely gone. Can I eq the drums differently somehow? I don't have tons of low end in the bass or guitar which to me would be what would be drowning the toms out no?

I'd route the toms to a bus where you can compress them as a group and bump up certain mid and high mid frequencies until they jump out where you want them.

another (probably better) option would be to replace the tom hits (using a drum trigger/replacement plugin) with better sounding (sampled) toms. this happens all the time in pro mixes, or so I have read.
 
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Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Check that there is no 'comb filtering' happening. If the toms phase is slightly misaligned with the overheads for example they will dissapear when both tracks are played together. Zoom right in and time align until you can see they are in phase, you can tell comb filtering because it actually looks somewhat like a comb.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

I'd route the toms to a bus where you can compress them as a group and bump up certain mid and high mid frequencies until they jump out where you want them.

Sorry, bad idea - each tom needs to be compressed and eq'd on it's own, as the compressors and eq's will all react differently to each tom. You can by all means compress the drum bus or add some parallel compression, but compressing toms together is rarely a good idea.

Have you edited the bleed between hits out? AKA is there still crap from the kick/snare/cymbals playing through the tom mics? I go through and manually edit around each tom hit/set of hits to make sure I get as little bleed as possible. This lets you boost the top end to get stick attack and 'click' out of the drum without having ridiculous amounts of cymbal bleed poke through between.

The other option is to put a gate on them, but that has the same effect as the manual editing, usually with less precision.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Sorry, bad idea - each tom needs to be compressed and eq'd on it's own, as the compressors and eq's will all react differently to each tom. You can by all means compress the drum bus or add some parallel compression, but compressing toms together is rarely a good idea.

let's pretend someone else proposed that idea, hehe. my evil twin brother that hacked all my forum accounts, yeah that's it!
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

All our drums each had a separate track, plus the overheads though.

Ho, hum. Could be phase cancellation issues. Could be two copies of the same sound muddying each other up.
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

Getting even more basic, how tightly/loosely were those toms tuned?
 
Re: Toms getting lost in the mix

OP has never responded with the basics of how they were recorded....I am unsubscribing as the rest of this is just wasted typing without that.
 
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