I've been working on improving my ability to recognize missing frequencies without comparing the altered sound to the original, but I still haven’t found a reliable way to do it. Most of the time, I get close — usually within about 100 Hz — but other times I’m way off.

Do you have any tips that could help me make more accurate guesses? I’m pretty sure this is a skill that would really help me make better mixing decisions. Thanks in advance!
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Vitalii Mizhenin
May 23, 14:18
Santi it's important question that u ask.
and I try to tell my vision of it

first of all - you have already done the main thing that had to be done with this task.
training without switching is a very correct and very important solution.
it is difficult to come up with the best solution.
this is because with switching, with comparison with the original, the frequency cutting exercise turns into an exercise to boostin frequencies
(that is, in this case, one begins to make decisions based on the phase of returning previously deduced frequencies ... and this exercise for adding).

In this case, the main advice, the one that is given most often: carry on train (and keep calm)))
and this is not an empty advice. This is what works most often, this is what is most effective.

an important aspect for training without switching - one should know well the samples chosen for training. It must remember its original sound.
even better - use samples with a full frequency range.
on some types of samples, the same task is solved easier than on others.
find out what type is yours and train with it more often.
in my case, it's a samples of the drum kit.
a successful solution to the problem motivates to keep training.

Unfortunately, the Kit Cut game dosent offer the Sample of Pink noise
one more regret about the Kit Cut game - there is no option to choose what sound we will hear first, the original Sample, or Semple with changes.
we always hear Sample with cuted frequencies. And if we decide not to switch, we must make decisions based on what we hear.
(and for a meaningful solution, we must either remember this sample well, or should be sure that this samle was initially contained all frequencies).
but, if we had the option to hear the first sound of the original, and make one press to subtract frequencies
(but only one press! We should not press the second time and return substracted frequencies! Only subtraction !!!)
then it would also be a very useful exercise.

and yes ... it may seems that there are no improvements ...
but, a very frequent case with training hearing, when improvements do not occur gradually, but a significant jump.
those. One day, one suddenly begins to hear what he has not heard yesterday.

but still you need to be prepared for the sad side of the issue - improvements are not endless.
everyone has its own level (both physical and psychological) which will never rise above.
but, as a rule, it is enough for successful mixing
Congrats @Caner Keskin for winning the Diamond Ears Award!
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Lio LM
May 21
Congratulations Caner! 🌈🌈🌈
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Colin Aiken
May 23, 05:27
Outstanding job!
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Helmut Mair
May 23, 13:53
Congratulations!
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SoundGym
May 23, 09:40 in SoundGym Official
Congrats @Oualid Hamza for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Paul Schreiber
May 23, 12:21
Great work, Oualid!
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Lio LM
May 23, 13:02
Congrats Oualid! 🌞🌞🌞
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SoundGym
May 23, 04:42 in SoundGym Official
Congrats @Alex Erling for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Colin Aiken
May 23, 05:24
Awesome!
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Paul Schreiber
May 23, 12:23
Way to go, Alex!
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Lio LM
May 23, 13:01
Congrats Alex! 🌞🌞🌞
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Tom Rabbit
May 23, 10:22 in SoundGym Cafe
How do I get my vocals to sound like this? Just for using in the background of the song, not as in the main vocals. Thanks!
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matias diaz
May 23, 11:53
it seems like it has a warmth eq setting, like focusing on the low mids, not a lot of mids and focusing on just a part of the brightness to be just enough so the vocal don't feel muddy or boomy, and a room/ambience reverb that you can really feel and the a long plate or bright hall but quite. I think that's the key and to find a good vocal sample/loop
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Florian Ernst
May 23, 12:05
I'd try some pitch / formant shifting, and maybe some auto-tune. That should get ya in the ballpark. :)
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Netta Kaplan
May 23, 09:38 in SoundGym Cafe
HU
Congrats @동현 이 for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Paul Schreiber
May 22, 14:24
Great job!
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동현 이
May 22, 17:06
will dia ears
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Colin Aiken
May 23, 05:25
Congratulations!
Congrats @Eric Lappe for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Steve Rinaldi
May 22, 20:11
Nice, Eric! Congrats for obtaining your Golden Ears!
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Cindy Preta
May 22, 20:23
Congratulations Eric !! Amazing work !
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Colin Aiken
May 23, 05:25
Bravo!
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Cindy Preta
May 22, 20:10 in SoundGym Cafe
@Stelios Mavroyiannis On the way to go !!
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Stelios Mavroyiannis
May 22, 21:06
Thanks, Cindy! I'm on it!
A Review That Captures My Business's Core Values
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Paul Schreiber
May 22, 14:23
Looking good, Kevin!
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Kevin Koelzer
May 22, 16:09
Thanks Paul

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