Master... thanks for your knowledge for people who love music. Much respect. Before I try it out, I got one more question: During the recording: Should I mix kick snare hi hat in all individual track or should I just put them all in one track?? And to be honest... I don't really know about hz... so is there any thing I could read on line??? Thanks!!!!!!
If you are actually recording the drums with mics, then recording each drum to its own track might be necessary.
But if you are sequencing drums that have already been recorded and cleaned up(samples) then they can just go to one track. That way you can apply a single eq to all the drum sounds, and it makes parallel compression much easier.
As for hz or hertz, they are cycles per second. The more cycles per second, the higher the frequency.
If you look at an eq, it is laid out with the frequencies.
Low bass frequecies within human hearing start at 20hz.
All the way up to the high limit of our hearing at around 20kzh, this gradually falls lower and lower with age.
Everything in between 20hz and 20khz is the frequency range of our hearing, and it is also the playground for a producer.
Booming basses are around 50-60hz.
Kicks are around 80-100hz
Snares are usually around 1200hz
And hi hats are around 8-12khz
Many instruments have broad frequency ranges and can often clash with each other by pushing a particular frequency into the red and clipping, this can be fixed by panning and equing complementarily. Which is choosing which sound you would like to shine through at that point, and equing out the particular frequency in the other instrument/s to allow it to come through.