![]() However, if you have good ears and know what you're doing, you'll get even more benefits out of the program than just trying to "match" an EQ curve. Is it a substitute for a good mastering engineer? Nope. As an EQ, it's pretty powerful and sounds pretty good. I own Har-Bal, and I do use it occasionally. I wouldn't go overboard in this direction, but I would be mastering each track with my ears on the matter. If something is sticking out, definately fix things to be more in line. that's a matter of taste and certainly not a rule. Regarding making different artists fit together well for a compilation. I use the Waves Phase Linear Multi Band Compressor, process. if I've got to do it myself, you bet I'm using HarBal to help me along, regardless of any "use you ears, not your eyes", second hand logic. I would much rather send my stuff to a good ME than do it myself but. It is also, as Kiwi pointed out, a great eq. It requires your good taste to use it well. The people that diss HarBal are the people that haven't used HarBal, relying on wisdom and soundbytes from forums, etc. ![]() ![]() And yes, you have to use your ears! It takes quite a few tries to create a good curve for a particular tune and then listen to it on different systems.Ħ0Hurts! I agree. ![]()
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