I don't know what it would be called, but I was wondering if anyone knows of a free app or Windows software that can show an EQ graph of a guitar track or song. Maybe something that shows like a bar or line graph across hz frequency range or whatever. I'd appreciate the help, thanks in advance.
EQ Visualization App?
-
MistaGuitah -
October 1, 2018 at 10:36 PM -
Thread is marked as Resolved.
-
-
One name for that kind of display is a Spectrum Analyzer.
Ozone is an audio mastering program that includes a way to capture and compare the frequency curves of multiple sounds. It is typically used to compare full mixes of similar songs. Some people have also used it to “tone match” individual guitar tracks.
-
Try Sonic Visualize http://www.sonicvisualiser.org it's free and supports many types of plug-ins that allow you to analyze music.
It may be what you're looking for, not sure.
-
Thanks guys. This is going to be a big help dialing in some sounds. I appreciate it.
-
I can't speak for PC, but IIRC there's a tonne of free spectrum-analysis plugins out there for Mac. No reason to think it'd be any different for you.
If it's simple visual feedback you desire, you should be able to find many plugin options that offer anything from 16 (or thereabouts) bands to 30 or more.
Google "free spectrum analyser plugin PC". Too many links to post here.
-
Voxengo SPAN is free and great:
[Blocked Image: https://voxfiles-c496.kxcdn.com/scrnalt/span-large1024.jpg/getbyname/2vq5b/span-large1024.jpg]
-
Lol yes but you know if you really want to ''sound like'' any great guitarist, you'll need more than Voxengo ...
LOL
-
Lol yes but you know if you really want to ''sound like'' any great guitarist, you'll need more than Voxengo ...
He never said that was his goal. It's worth pointing out that spectrum analyzers can be very useful for pinpointing problem frequencies(eg. fizz, etc.)
-
In that scenario, '80s Bro', an EQ plugin that includes the display is awesome, as I'm sure you'd know.
Seems like it's fast becoming the norm these days, and I'm all for it. Makes things so-much-simpler.
-
He never said that was his goal. It's worth pointing out that spectrum analyzers can be very useful for pinpointing problem frequencies(eg. fizz, etc.)
Yeah, and getting a general idea of frequency distribution - use the tools that are available!