In Reply to: DBX and other's subharmonic synthesizers posted by Ken Perkins on September 2, 2004 at 10:32:57:
Frequencys present in the music from 50 to 100hz are lowered one octave to 25 to 50hz via the large knob. As you increase the gain on this control, you increase the subharmonic sythesized mix. The smaller bass gain knob boost the content above 50 hz so you can balance with the added subharmonic content. The one nice thing about the DBX unit is that it incorporates a subsonic filter below 20hz for vinyl playback.Simply said, it makes fake bass.
Low male vocals dropped and octave sound un-natural.
It is an 'effect' and it does not make up for system limitations, like reverb is an 'effect'.
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Follow Ups
- Re: DBX and other's subharmonic synthesizers - RBP 10:50:35 09/02/04 (3)
- Re: DBX and other's subharmonic synthesizers - Hornlover 08:03:39 09/03/04 (0)
- Re: DBX and other's subharmonic synthesizers - Ken Perkins 10:58:29 09/02/04 (1)
- Re: DBX and other's subharmonic synthesizers - RBP 11:06:24 09/02/04 (0)