Something to make your tracks sound much better!
Heres a screenshot of the “Lochness Curve” and some of my notes.
This might not apply to everyone, but I wanted to share an easy technique that's been a game-changer for me when working with Suno-generated music. The process involves downloading your Suno file, importing it into a DAW, and using EQ to enhance the good frequencies while taming the bad ones often present in digitally produced audio.
During my research, I stumbled across a video of a producer discussing an EQ curve shared by a 20-year mastering engineer for his final mixes. I took a screenshot of the values and moved on. But tonight, while mastering a Christmas song I made for someone, my mix still felt like it was missing something. That’s when I remembered the EQ curve.
I decided to give it a shot, tweaking it slightly to suit Suno—and wow! The difference was night and day. I tested it on many other Suno tracks, and they all sounded noticeably better. This might just be the tool we’ve been waiting for, so I’m sharing it with you all. I hope it works well for you. (I have only tried it on songs with vocals, so far).
Here’s how to apply it:
Use a 30-band EQ if you can (the stock EQ in Adobe Audition works great). Most DAWs should have one, but if not, there are free 30-band EQ VSTs available.
While a parametric EQ can work, it’s generally less precise for this technique.
Apply the "Lochness Curve" values as a starting point and fine-tune based on your track.
Follow the suggestions circled in the screenshot: Set your Range to 12dB, the bottom should be at -6dB, adjust your gain or make-up gain to between positive 3dB and 4dB.
This EQ curve helps place vocals in the sweet spot while taming harshness. It works beautifully with Suno and even with non-Suno mixes.
I’ll share the values as text, of the curve in a follow-up comment. Try it out and let me know how it works for you!
Happy mixing!
Good Luck, let me know if it works for you. Make sure to save the preset if you like it.
Heres a screenshot of the “Lochness Curve” and some of my notes.
This might not apply to everyone, but I wanted to share an easy technique that's been a game-changer for me when working with Suno-generated music. The process involves downloading your Suno file, importing it into a DAW, and using EQ to enhance the good frequencies while taming the bad ones often present in digitally produced audio.
During my research, I stumbled across a video of a producer discussing an EQ curve shared by a 20-year mastering engineer for his final mixes. I took a screenshot of the values and moved on. But tonight, while mastering a Christmas song I made for someone, my mix still felt like it was missing something. That’s when I remembered the EQ curve.
I decided to give it a shot, tweaking it slightly to suit Suno—and wow! The difference was night and day. I tested it on many other Suno tracks, and they all sounded noticeably better. This might just be the tool we’ve been waiting for, so I’m sharing it with you all. I hope it works well for you. (I have only tried it on songs with vocals, so far).
Here’s how to apply it:
Use a 30-band EQ if you can (the stock EQ in Adobe Audition works great). Most DAWs should have one, but if not, there are free 30-band EQ VSTs available.
While a parametric EQ can work, it’s generally less precise for this technique.
Apply the "Lochness Curve" values as a starting point and fine-tune based on your track.
Follow the suggestions circled in the screenshot: Set your Range to 12dB, the bottom should be at -6dB, adjust your gain or make-up gain to between positive 3dB and 4dB.
This EQ curve helps place vocals in the sweet spot while taming harshness. It works beautifully with Suno and even with non-Suno mixes.
I’ll share the values as text, of the curve in a follow-up comment. Try it out and let me know how it works for you!
Happy mixing!
Good Luck, let me know if it works for you. Make sure to save the preset if you like it.