Three EQ Rules That'll Un-Muddy Your Mixes (and Maybe Your Thinking)
3 Rules of #EQ
Your mix sounds like someone stuffed a blanket over the speakers. You've been there. I've been there. Turns out the fix isn't about adding more... it's about learning to subtract with purpose.
Joe Gilder from Home Studio Corner dropped a video that's deceptively simple. Three rules for EQ. That's it. But inside those three rules is a framework that applies way beyond the mixing board.
Let's dig in.
Rule One: Balance the Frequencies
This sounds obvious until you realize how often we miss it.
Every time you reach for an equalizer, you're admitting something is out of balance. Not broken. Not wrong. Just... tilted. The human ear picks up frequencies from roughly 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz, and when we listen to music, we want to feel all of it. Not equally... but in balance.
Gilder draws this out beautifully. Imagine a big hump sitting right around 200 Hz. Everything else is quieter by comparison. What do you hear? Mud. Pure, thick, suffocating mud. The instinct is to boost something else to compensate. But the real move? Cut that hump. Bring it back in line.
One thing he nails... you're not chasing a flat curve. A great mix usually has a touch more low end and a little less high end. It's balanced to the ear, not to the eye. Trust what you hear over what you see on an EQ analyzer. Your ears are the instrument here.
Rule Two: Get to Know Five Anchor Frequencies
This is where things get practical. Gilder breaks the entire frequency spectrum into five landmarks. Big, round, easy-to-remember numbers:
- 50 Hz — The deep lows. When it's right... punch. Kick drum hits your chest. When it's wrong... boomy. Everything rattles and nothing cuts through. - 100 Hz — The "hooting" frequency (credit to Ian Shepherd for that gem). Done well, you get warmth. That gorgeous, tubey, analog warmth everyone chases. Overdone? Mud. And this 100-200 Hz range is the single most common trouble spot in home studio mixes. - 500 Hz — Fullness lives here. A mix that feels big and complete owes a lot to this range. But pile it up and you get boxy... like recording in a bare drywall room with tile floors. You can almost hear the walls. - 1 kHz — Clarity. This is where you understand what the singer is actually saying. Push it too far and you land in harshness territory. Your ears start wincing. - 10 kHz — Air and crispness. The shimmer on top of a great mix. But boost it recklessly and you get what engineers call "ice pick"... a high-end bite so aggressive you have to turn the speakers down.
Here's the gold: each frequency has a positive and negative personality. Punch vs. boomy. Warmth vs. muddy. Fullness vs. boxy. Clarity vs. harsh. Air vs. strident.
Learn those ten words and you've got a diagnostic vocabulary for any mix. That's not trivia... that's a working toolkit.
Rule Three: Think Like a Sculptor
This one hits different.
Gilder says imagine someone hands you a block of marble and says "make a dinosaur." You don't glue more marble on top. You remove what doesn't belong. What's left is the sculpture.
Subtractive EQ works the same way. Cut before you boost. Every track you stack in a mix adds frequencies. Things pile up. Especially in that 100-200 Hz zone we already talked about. If your only move is boosting... you're adding signal on top of signal on top of a problem that's still sitting there underneath.
Cutting removes the offending material. What remains sounds cleaner, more natural, more intentional.
Does that mean boosting is evil? No. Gilder is honest about this... he's said provocative things in the past, but the truth is more nuanced. Boosting has its place. But it should come second. Subtract first. Then add only what's missing.
Think about that in your own work. Your own life, even. How often do we pile new habits, new tools, new commitments on top of problems we never actually removed? The mess is still underneath. We just can't see it anymore.
The Bigger Frame
What Gilder is really teaching isn't EQ. It's critical listening. It's trusting your senses over your screens. It's developing a vocabulary for what you're experiencing so you can act on it with precision instead of guessing.
Balance. Know the landscape. Remove before you add.
That's a mixing philosophy. That's also a life philosophy.
And for those of us working in home studios... that muddy 100-200 Hz range? It's our dragon. Slay it consistently and your mixes will leap forward. Not because you added something brilliant, but because you had the discipline to take something away.
Three rules. Balance. Learn the terrain. Sculpt by subtraction. Simple enough to remember while you're mid-mix at 2 AM. Powerful enough to change how everything sounds. If you've been chasing clarity by piling on more... stop. Cut first. Trust your ears. The mix you're looking for might already be in there... buried under the stuff that doesn't belong. ✨
--- Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7H3cHfV8rXI
From TIG's Notebook
Thoughts that surfaced while watching this.
Who teaches us to be normal when we're one of a kind? — *Syd, Legion*— TIG's Notebook — On Self & Identity
That's the funny thing about hope. Nobody else gets to decide if you feel it. That choice belongs to you. — *K-Pop Demon Hunters*— TIG's Notebook — Core Principles
We don't build trust by offering help. We build trust by asking for help. — *Simon Sinek*— TIG's Notebook — On Connection & Understanding
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