A nice trick is to link sound you know with frequency exemple for me 2K is the sound of a micro wave buzzer , 300 make me thing of the not G, 200 is a kid song I know, 100 is a elevator and so on.
this is known as "Relative pitch" :3 I also pick out certain notes from hearing them in songs, thinking of them played on a particular instrument, etc.
interesting how 4k and 12k really sound grating and i can instantly recognize them but i have a hard time identifying some of the lower mid frequencies
Yes high frequencies are known to be very directional hence the speaker's position is very important. In order to mix properly there should be the distance between the speakers and between your head and both speakers. The angle of the speakers should be 60deg towards your head
I think I should address the common misconception here.. Lemme explain what is Hz. Its pronounced as hurts, its a measurement of pain. The higher it goes, the more it hurts. e.g. 60 hurts less than 12,000 hurts.
Back in the day of 32kbit modems, this was the starting note of connecting to the internet. It's by far the easiest one for me to identify just because of that. :)
I'm not sure if I'm understanding this right. The difference I hear is in pitch, but it's not until I get upwards of maybe 800 hz that I really notice a difference in, let's say, brightness
each note has a specific frequency, for instance, A4 is 440hz. try raising with an eq these different bands (60 120 250hz...) with a white noise track.
I'm sorry but what is the use of hearing this??? I mean all instruments will be in a diverse frequency range with fundamentals & overtones but this is just a sine wave...... I'm just a beginner if anything is wrong sorry
its just a more exact exercise, which is not the best because you have nothing to compare it to. in music school they test both a music track, and white noise (they raise - or lower- by 6db each band of a multiband eq, 60 120 250 500hz etcetera. you have to determine which change is being applied)
you would need a 20 inch woofer to produce anything near 7.5 hertz. no laptop or headphones are going to produce that so if your into the 209 frequency then go ahead and listen away, but is your hear for the 7.5< you would be better off beating a drum at 7.5 hertz lol. hate to be a party pooper but my behringer 8 inch studio monitors go as low as 35 hertz sooooo... if its a sine wave we will hear nothing if its a saw wave with harmonics we will hear those. same thing when listening to the lowest notes on a piano on small speakers, you will not hear the note itself but its rich harmonics instead.
@qazwsxzwharp Plz Explain how bcoz I'm a beginner..... Also various instruments have various fundamentals & Overtones which make the timbre...... Also what are problematic frequencies??
Prince Kingston Problematic frequencies would be those that are just irritating to hear that constantly jump out of your mix if it hasn’t been tamed properly. This video shows your which problematic frequencies you might wanna look out for and remove. It’s actually helpful. To just have this on in the background when you’re doing your day to day stuff. A lot of new people to production or mixing won’t know the difference between bad and good frequencies and what I see a lot on sound cloud especially is people compress the hell out of good frequencies and get left with bad ones. This video aims to combat that
@@brandon8100 just look up a basic guide to EQ and Compression. Compression is harder than EQ to understand, so I wouldn't even want to talk about it to others.
Now my ear Hz :-)
😄
2000 is ok and 3000 hurts and 4000 hurts and 6000 hurts and 8000 hurts and 12000 hurts
So many of too many hurts
The bats association appear here asking the approaching dog flashmob what's going in
sir....bra-vo. Insert Obama approval face meme here.
Back in 2001 it cost me 30 dollar to get the cd of this stuff
Sick Engine Really!?
That makes me grateful as hell
Team Stark is this what was originally Golden ears or no?
does this video helping or im wasting my time
Wasn't Golden Ears a few hundred bucks?
A nice trick is to link sound you know with frequency exemple for me 2K is the sound of a micro wave buzzer , 300 make me thing of the not G, 200 is a kid song I know, 100 is a elevator and so on.
Cool😊
this is known as "Relative pitch" :3 I also pick out certain notes from hearing them in songs, thinking of them played on a particular instrument, etc.
2k sounds like a fax machine lol XD
Hertzful. No pain, no gain.
I found interesting to do this exercise in front of a piano to locate 60-4K Hz tones.
Thank you.
No cap 1hr of pain a day will make the doubt go away
I start every week here and see the Hertzful comment welcoming me back. Thank you for this upload, so useful! Is there a Mid Range only version?
Thank you for uploading this!
It has helped me so much.
This video is like my ear gym
At the beginning as I was doing really good and then i started making more and more mistakes idk why, but i'm glad this video is on youtube tho !
Because more you practice less you can lie to yourself :p
your ears are getting tired :)
interesting how 4k and 12k really sound grating and i can instantly recognize them but i have a hard time identifying some of the lower mid frequencies
the higher the hertz the more it hurts my ear
now think about how dogs feel when they hear dog whistle :/
you mean, the more it hertz your ear?
Eugene See good one 😂
This really helped me alot. Thanks audiogearz 👌😤🔥
3000hz is the sound of da devil
BRO ON GOD
If anything, i learned why tweeters really need to be at ear level. wow the high ones i couldnt hear until i moved my head to find the sweet spot.
Yes high frequencies are known to be very directional hence the speaker's position is very important. In order to mix properly there should be the distance between the speakers and between your head and both speakers. The angle of the speakers should be 60deg towards your head
DO THAT 1 HOUR A DAY
AND U WILL NO EAR NO MORE AHAHAH
Poor woman, she got hurt a lot of times.
Lol😂
😝
😂😂😂
💀
ay does this actually help train your ears, or is it just audible hell?
in the end love hetz..
I thought it stinks.
Here’s me about to try this with my headphones on, good thing I didn’t
I think I should address the common misconception here.. Lemme explain what is Hz. Its pronounced as hurts, its a measurement of pain. The higher it goes, the more it hurts. e.g. 60 hurts less than 12,000 hurts.
Thank you!
12000 hz makes my spine tingle
Bro it help me lot thanks
Lol i always guessed right!
Great
could you not step down the volume as you increase frequency?
I was looking for it
No mistaking 2000 hz
Back in the day of 32kbit modems, this was the starting note of connecting to the internet. It's by far the easiest one for me to identify just because of that. :)
I'm not sure if I'm understanding this right. The difference I hear is in pitch, but it's not until I get upwards of maybe 800 hz that I really notice a difference in, let's say, brightness
each note has a specific frequency, for instance, A4 is 440hz. try raising with an eq these different bands (60 120 250hz...) with a white noise track.
Buy better speaker.
And now I finished I hear 4000Hz even nothing is being played...
Can anybody hear the 12000Hz tone? I couldn't hear it in the video...
Bad news cheif
Ya it’s there. Just means your ears aren’t able to register that high of a frequency, which happens as you get older.
I can clearly hear that. Probably your ears might not be able to register them. But actually, they might not be really important while mixing.
yes but, I had to turn up the volume.
I'm sorry for your loss
I'm sorry but what is the use of hearing this??? I mean all instruments will be in a diverse frequency range with fundamentals & overtones but this is just a sine wave......
I'm just a beginner if anything is wrong sorry
its just a more exact exercise, which is not the best because you have nothing to compare it to. in music school they test both a music track, and white noise (they raise - or lower- by 6db each band of a multiband eq, 60 120 250 500hz etcetera. you have to determine which change is being applied)
when you are cutting or boosting with an eq, before you make decision you gotta know which frequency range is lacking or too much.
0:24. 1:19
you would need a 20 inch woofer to produce anything near 7.5 hertz. no laptop or headphones are going to produce that so if your into the 209 frequency then go ahead and listen away, but is your hear for the 7.5< you would be better off beating a drum at 7.5 hertz lol. hate to be a party pooper but my behringer 8 inch studio monitors go as low as 35 hertz sooooo...
if its a sine wave we will hear nothing if its a saw wave with harmonics we will hear those. same thing when listening to the lowest notes on a piano on small speakers, you will not hear the note itself but its rich harmonics instead.
considering the fact that this video only goes down to 60hz, this really doesn't matter
Im deaf
15000khz is my girlfriend scream at me when I forget out anniversary
"12,000 hurts" indeed
Wtf, I can't even hear it. o.O
Where is 1 kHz?
ears can only hear between 20hz and 20,000hz
My ears are in pain
I don't hear where it helps with mixing in no kinder way
that because you ear probable wasn't trained yet
@qazwsxzwharp Plz Explain how bcoz I'm a beginner.....
Also various instruments have various fundamentals & Overtones which make the timbre......
Also what are problematic frequencies??
Prince Kingston Problematic frequencies would be those that are just irritating to hear that constantly jump out of your mix if it hasn’t been tamed properly. This video shows your which problematic frequencies you might wanna look out for and remove. It’s actually helpful. To just have this on in the background when you’re doing your day to day stuff. A lot of new people to production or mixing won’t know the difference between bad and good frequencies and what I see a lot on sound cloud especially is people compress the hell out of good frequencies and get left with bad ones. This video aims to combat that
@@CERTI0151 what do you mean by compressing a frequency?
@@brandon8100 just look up a basic guide to EQ and Compression. Compression is harder than EQ to understand, so I wouldn't even want to talk about it to others.