What is Resonance?
Resonance is the tendency of a system — whether a room, instrument, or audio circuit — to vibrate or amplify specific frequencies more than others, creating audible peaks in the frequency response.
How It Works
Why It Matters for Your Mix
Uncontrolled resonances are one of the most common reasons home recordings sound amateur. A room mode at 150 Hz makes the bass guitar boom inconsistently. A snare drum ring at 900 Hz cuts through the mix unpleasantly. A vocal recorded too close to the mic has a boomy proximity-effect resonance below 200 Hz. These problems are immediately audible to trained ears and mark a mix as unprofessional. Learning to identify and surgically remove resonances with narrow EQ cuts is one of the most practical and immediately useful mixing skills you can develop. A few precise 3-5 dB cuts at problematic resonant frequencies can transform a boxy, ringy recording into a clean, professional-sounding track.
Common Mistakes
Cutting too aggressively at resonant frequencies
A 12 dB narrow cut might eliminate a resonance but also creates an unnatural "hole" in the frequency spectrum that sounds strange. Start with a smaller cut (3-5 dB) and increase only if the resonance is still audible. The goal is to tame it, not eliminate the frequency entirely.
Confusing resonance with musical content
Not every prominent frequency is a resonance — some are simply the natural fundamental or harmonics of the instrument. A bass note that is loud is not necessarily resonant; it might just be a loud performance. Listen for unnaturally sustained or ringing frequencies that do not match the musical content.
Using a Q that is too wide
Resonances are typically narrow-band phenomena. Using a wide Q to cut a resonance affects far more of the spectrum than necessary, changing the overall tonal character of the sound. Use a narrow Q (4-8 or higher) to surgically target just the offending frequency.
How We Analyze This in Your Mix
RoastYourMix uses spectral analysis to identify sustained frequency peaks that suggest resonance problems. We look for narrow-band energy concentrations that persist throughout the track, inconsistent bass response that suggests room modes, and frequency peaks that are disproportionately loud relative to the surrounding spectrum. These indicators help us pinpoint specific frequency ranges where resonance may be degrading your mix quality.
See Resonance in Action
Upload your mix and see how resonance affects your track.
Get Your Mix RoastedFrequently Asked Questions
Play a sine wave sweep (or a bass note chromatically up the scale) and listen for notes that are dramatically louder or sustain longer than others. Those are your room modes. You can also use a measurement microphone with room analysis software (like REW — Room EQ Wizard) for precise measurements. Knowing your room modes helps you make better mixing decisions.
Feedback occurs when a microphone picks up its own amplified signal from a speaker, creating a self-reinforcing loop that builds to a loud, sustained tone. Resonance is the natural tendency of a space or object to amplify specific frequencies. Feedback often occurs at resonant frequencies because those are where the system is most sensitive.
Absolutely, and it is often the better choice. A dynamic EQ only cuts when the resonant frequency is actually problematic, leaving the frequency untouched the rest of the time. This is more transparent than a static cut that permanently removes energy from that range, even during moments when the resonance is not an issue.
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