Mix Roastby M Street Music

How to Fix Weak Low End in Your Mix

Your track sounds great on headphones but completely falls apart on a club PA or car stereo — the low end just isn't there. Or maybe it's the opposite: you can feel sub bass rumbling but there's no punch, no definition, no weight. A solid low end is the foundation of any modern mix, and getting it right is deceptively difficult.

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How to Recognize This Problem

  • The mix sounds thin and weightless on larger speaker systems
  • Sub bass is present on a spectrum analyzer but doesn't translate on smaller speakers
  • The kick drum disappears behind the bass or vice versa
  • Low end sounds inconsistent — some notes boom while others vanish
  • Turning up the bass just makes the mix boomy without adding power

Why This Happens

Monitoring in an untreated room

Room modes create massive peaks and nulls in the low-frequency response. You might be sitting in a null at 80Hz and compensating by boosting — which sounds balanced in your room but translates as overwhelming bass everywhere else. Or the reverse: a peak at your listening position makes you cut too much.

Kick and bass fighting for the same frequency range

If both your kick and bass instrument occupy 60-100Hz without any frequency separation, they cancel and reinforce each other unpredictably. The result is a low end that pumps, phases, and never feels solid.

No harmonic content above the sub range

Pure sub bass below 60Hz is felt more than heard, and it's completely invisible on phone speakers, laptops, and small Bluetooth speakers. Without harmonics in the 80-200Hz range, your bass "disappears" on most consumer playback systems.

Phase issues between layered bass sources

When you layer a sub bass with a bass guitar or synth, phase misalignment between the layers causes partial cancellation. This is especially common with samples that weren't phase-aligned or when DI and amp signals are combined without phase correction.

How to Fix It

1

Define kick and bass frequency zones

Decide who owns the sub (below 60Hz) and who owns the punch (60-120Hz). In most modern production, the kick owns the "thump" around 50-60Hz and the bass fills 80-120Hz, or vice versa. Use high-pass and low-pass filters to separate them cleanly.

2

Add harmonic saturation to your sub bass

Run your sub bass through a saturation plugin (tape emulation, tube emulation, or a dedicated harmonic generator). This creates upper harmonics at 100Hz, 150Hz, 200Hz that make the bass audible on small speakers while preserving the sub weight on larger ones.

3

Use sidechain compression between kick and bass

Apply a sidechain compressor on the bass triggered by the kick. Set a fast attack (0.5-2ms) and a release that matches your tempo (50-150ms). This creates a brief "pocket" for the kick to punch through, then the bass fills back in. Even 2-3dB of ducking makes a huge difference.

4

Check phase alignment between bass layers

If you're layering multiple bass sources, solo them together and flip the polarity on one. The version that sounds fuller and louder is the correct phase relationship. Use a phase alignment plugin or manually nudge the waveform to maximize low-end correlation.

5

Reference on multiple systems, especially small speakers

If your low end translates on earbuds and a phone speaker, it will work everywhere. Use a mix reference plugin with a low-pass filter to compare your sub region against reference tracks. Don't just look at the analyzer — listen on real consumer devices.

How RoastYourMix Detects This

RoastYourMix measures your sub bass energy (20-60Hz), bass punch (60-120Hz), and low-mid warmth (120-250Hz) separately and compares each band against genre-appropriate references. We identify if your low end lacks sub weight, harmonic presence, or both, and flag kick-bass phase correlation issues.

Frequently Asked Questions

Small speakers can't reproduce frequencies below ~80Hz. The "trick" is harmonic content — your brain perceives a bass note's fundamental even when it hears only the upper harmonics (called the "missing fundamental" effect). Use saturation, distortion, or a harmonic enhancer to generate harmonics at 100-300Hz so the bass is audible on any system.

It depends on the genre. In hip-hop and EDM, the 808 or sub bass typically owns everything below 60Hz and the kick sits higher (80-100Hz). In rock and pop, the kick usually dominates the lowest octave and the bass guitar fills 80-200Hz. Choose one approach and commit to it.

Open-back studio headphones (like HD600) give a fairly accurate low-end picture, but they lack the physical impact of speakers. Closed-back and consumer headphones often hype the bass. Use headphones as a secondary check, but always verify on at least one real speaker system — even a small one.

Every speaker and every room has its own low-frequency response. This is normal and unavoidable. The goal isn't to make it sound identical everywhere — it's to make it translate, meaning the bass is present and balanced across systems. Use references, multiple playback checks, and a well-treated room to get as close as possible.

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