
Here's one of those mixing tips that sounds almost too simple, but it will transform your low end: high-pass filter everything that isn't your kick or bass.
I'm talking about pads, leads, FX, vocals, arps — all of them. Those sub frequencies you can't even hear? They're stacking up and stealing headroom from the elements that actually need it.
Why Sub Frequencies Stack Up

Every synth, every sample, every reverb tail generates some low-frequency content. Individually, you might not notice it. But 15-20 tracks all contributing rumble below 80 Hz? That's a muddy, undefined mess competing with your kick and sub.
The Fix: High-Pass at 80–120 Hz

Drop a high-pass filter on every non-bass element. Set it between 80-120 Hz depending on the sound. Use a gentle 12 dB/oct slope so it sounds natural, not thin. I cover this technique in detail in my Mixdown Uplifting Trance course.
EQ Cheat Sheet for Trance Music
Free download. Every frequency range mapped out for trance production.
FREE
Solo vs. In Context

A pad with full low frequencies sounds great when you solo it. Rich, warm, full. But in the mix? It's fighting your kick for space. Always make EQ decisions in context, with the full mix playing. That's how pros mix.
Clean Low End = Loud Mix

Remove what you can't hear, keep what matters. Your master bus compressor and limiter will thank you — they'll have more headroom to work with, which means a louder, punchier master.
How To Mixdown Uplifting Trance
The complete mixing course. EQ, compression, stereo imaging, and more.
Full Course Available
Got a question or want to share your results? Drop a comment below — I read every single one.

















