By Craig Anderton | Thu, 01 Oct 2009
A guitar covers about 3.5 octaves, a
bass about 3 octaves, most voices do
a few octaves—but keyboards can
cover 7 octaves and beyond. What’s
more, synthetic sounds often cover a
huge part of the frequency spectrum
(second only to drums), from thundering
bass to trebly highs. Your mission,
should you decide to accept it,
is to get that monster sound to play
well with other instruments, and sit in
a mix instead of dominate it (unless,
of course, the keyboard is supposed
to dominate the mix!).
The Electric/Acoustic
Dichotomy
If you’re recording primarily acoustic
instruments, or electric instruments
through amps, mixing in a synthesizer
that was recorded direct will often
sound just plain “wrong”—it will lack
the “air” created by recording
acoustic instruments through a mic,
as well as have an extended high
frequency response compared to
acoustic instruments.
There are four main solutions, which
can be used individually or together:
• Roll off some of highs. A little highfrequency
shelving, down maybe
1.5dB starting at 10kHz, will bring the
high-frequency spectrum more into
line with acoustic instruments. Be
careful, though; don’t dull the sound
too much, as it may still have to balance
sonically with the high frequency
transients caused by, for example,
picking an acoustic guitar string.
• Feed the keyboard through an
amp, mic it and record it to a track,
then blend that with the direct track.
If well-recorded, you might even want
to use the amp sound by itself. A
PA, or portable PA/instrument amp
like a Bose L1, can give a neutral
sound while a guitar amp offers
more “character.”
• Play back the direct recorded sound
through your monitors, and mic them.
This is a variation on going through an
amp, but if you don’t really have
any other way to add ambience,
this will work in a pinch.
• Add multiple short delays
(around 15–30ms), and mix them
in at low volume with the direct
sound. This helps simulate the
sound of getting early reflections
in a room. A tapped delay with
eight or more taps is ideal for
this; too few taps probably won’t
give a realistic enough sound.
The Potential of
Proper Panning
Most current synthesizers have
stereo outs to take advantage of
any onboard stereo effects, as
well as provide panning options.
For example, some patches might
tie notes to panning so that the
left notes come out of the left
speaker, and the right notes come out
of the right speaker; or splits might
be placed in stereo.
However, few instruments other
than drums are stereo. Guitar, bass,
woodwinds, voice, and the like are
basically mono sources, with stereo
created through the use of ambience
(real or artificial). If the keyboard covers
the entire stereo field, that doesn’t
leave much room for other instruments.
Figure 1 shows a typical rock band
panning scenario. The stereo synth
pans from left to somewhat left of
center rather than full left to full
right, and the stereo rhythm guitar
pans from right to somewhat right of
center. The center is left open for
bass, kick, vocals, leads, and other
“center-oriented” parts, while the
drums can be panned across the
stereo field, along with “extras” like
percussion or delays.
To spread the synth as desired,
simply pan the left track full left, and
the right track to left of center (if the
DAW’s track contains a stereo signal,
you may need to split the stereo
track into two mono tracks so each
can be panned individually, or there
may be some kind of balance control
that does the job). Sonar users can
take advantage of the Channel Tools
plug-in (Figure 2), which allows
changing not just the angle of each
channel in a stereo track, but also the
width. For example, the keyboard
could spread in “stereo” from left to
left of center, or be centered somewhere
along that path—in other
words, most of the keyboard’s audio
energy could be concentrated at the
midpoint between the left and leftof-
center points.
Remember, the whole point of
most mixes is to create a great balance
among all the instruments,
where they sound like a cohesive
ensemble but you can also differentiate
among the various parts. The
above tips can definitely help your
keyboard synth snuggle comfortably
into the mix with all the other instruments,
yet retain its identity.