How I Finally Learned To Mix Kick and Bass

Mixing & Mastering
How I Finally Learned To Mix Kick and Bass

I recently had a major mixing revelation.

No matter what I tried I couldn’t get my kick to stand out in the mix. The kick and bass sounded great on their own.

But music mixing was new to me. So when I’d play them together they’d sound flat and lifeless.

Until I did one simple thing that made everything sound perfect.

It’s actually really easy. Here’s how I did it.

The First Step Towards That Punchy Kick

First of all, I realized that my kick and my bass were fighting for space in the frequency range—the highs, mediums, and lows. This is no good.

Bass and kick tend to share a lot of the same frequencies in the low end. If they stay like this in your mix, they’ll mask each other. So how do you fix it?

Setting Up For Success

In order to make your kick cut through your mix you need to use compression in a specific way…

Put your Kick and Bass into separate tracks. I used Ableton for this example, but the principles are the same in any DAW. Set up your tracks like this:

kickandbass_sep

Here are the loops sounding great on their own:

The Kick

The Bass

When Your Bass And Kick Are Fighting

And here’s how they sound together:

They’re sounding a bit sad and limp. Let’s make that kick shine.

How to Get The Perfect Kick

Just use sidechaining.

It’s a type of compression that temporarily reduces the volume of one signal to let another one through.

In this example the bass is being set aside for a second to let the kick through.

So now that you know what the shortcut is, you probably wanna know how to do it. But first you need to set up some compression.

  1. Go to the ‘Audio Effects’ folder and select ‘Compressor’

Eff_list_Compressor

    1. Click the black triangle at the top left of the compressor plug-in

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Glue_SC_1

  1. Click the ‘Sidechain’ button
  2. Click the ‘Audio From’ tab and set it to ‘Kick’

Boom, you’ve just successfully set up your sidechain. How easy was that?

Experiment To Get Your Perfect Sound

Glue_SC_2

Now it’s time to experiment with the settings to get the ducking effect you want. Ducking just means how the bass will be lowered to let the kick through.

Play with the release time to make it fit the tempo and groove of the track. Adjust the threshold to mould the effect.

The Finished Sound

Now that your kick has more than enough room to do it’s thing. Listen again to the track. You’ll hear your bass letting the kick through. Nice, crisp and punchy:

The sidechain can seem a little subtle. Here’s a constant tone to show you what the sidechain is doing:

In The Mix

Your loops are finally getting along together. But sidechaining isn’t just for kick and bass. Try it on other parts of your mix as well.

No matter what you try, sidechaining allows you to finish your project with your kick and bass in the perfect place.

Rory Seydel

Rory Seydel is a musician, writer and father who takes pleasure in touring the world and making records. Creative Director at LANDR.

@Rory Seydel

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