EQ Frequency Guide for DJs: Understanding Every Band from Sub-Bass to Air
A DJ-focused guide to EQ frequency bands. Learn the role of each range from sub-bass to brilliance, the difference between DJ mixer EQ and mastering EQ, and how DeckReady's preset EQ curves work.
Sound Is Built from Frequencies#
The human hearing range spans approximately 20Hz to 20,000Hz (20kHz). Every piece of music is constructed within this spectrum, from the deepest bass to the highest shimmer.
EQ (equalizer) is the tool that boosts or cuts specific frequency bands within this range. Whether it's the EQ knobs on your DJ mixer or a parametric EQ in a DAW, the underlying principle is the same.
To improve the sound quality of your tracks, you first need to understand what each frequency band is responsible for.
The Frequency Band Map#
Sub-Bass (20Hz–60Hz)#
The band you feel in your body. More vibration than audible sound — you feel it in your chest and gut.
- What lives here: Kick drum fundamentals, sub-bass synths, 808 sustain
- Club role: The physical low-end that "shakes the floor." Only reproduced by large subwoofers
- Watch out: Too much overwhelms speakers and masks other frequencies. Too little sounds thin
Low End (60Hz–250Hz)#
The foundation of the track.
- What lives here: Kick drum body, bassline fundamentals, piano left hand
- Club role: Groove and weight. A solid low end feels "fat" and powerful
- Watch out: The most masking-prone band. When bass and kick overlap, the result is a muddy "muffled" sound
Low-Mids (250Hz–500Hz)#
Warmth and body.
- What lives here: Vocal thickness, snare body, guitar low strings
- Club role: Gives music "flesh." Appropriate amounts feel warm; excess feels muddy
- Watch out: This is where "muddiness" originates. A cut around 300Hz helps clarity in most mixes
Midrange (500Hz–2kHz)#
The band where human hearing is most sensitive. This is also the center of speech communication.
- What lives here: Main vocal range, piano right hand, guitar chords
- Club role: Determines melody and vocal clarity. Proper midrange = "cutting through the mix"
- Watch out: Too much boost sounds aggressive and harsh. Around 1kHz creates a "nasal" quality
Presence (2kHz–6kHz)#
Definition and clarity.
- What lives here: Vocal consonants (S, T sounds), snare attack, guitar pick noise
- Club role: Controls whether sounds feel "forward" or "recessed." Good presence lets music detail carry across a large room
- Watch out: Excess causes listening fatigue (the primary fatigue band). Especially critical during long DJ sets
Air / Brilliance (6kHz–20kHz)#
Openness and sparkle.
- What lives here: Cymbal shimmer, hi-hat sparkle, vocal "breath," synth harmonics
- Club role: Adds "openness" and "premium feel." Without it, audio sounds dark and closed-in
- Watch out: The band most affected by MP3 lossy compression (128kbps cuts above 16kHz)
DJ Mixer EQ#
DJ mixers typically feature 3-band (LOW/MID/HIGH) or 4-band (LOW/LO-MID/HI-MID/HIGH) EQ.
Typical Crossover Frequencies#
| Band | Frequency Range | Example Models |
|---|---|---|
| LOW | Below 250Hz | Pioneer DJM-900NXS2: 70Hz–250Hz |
| MID | 250Hz–2.5kHz | Allen & Heath XONE:96: 250Hz–2.5kHz |
| HIGH | Above 2.5kHz | Rane MP2015: 2.8kHz+ |
How DJ Mixer EQ Works#
DJ mixer EQ is fundamentally different from mastering EQ in design philosophy:
- Isolator-style: Each band can be cut to complete silence (-infinity dB) for removing specific frequencies during transitions
- Steep curves: Sharp band separation means minimal bleed between adjacent bands
- Real-time operation: Designed for turning knobs during live performance
DJ Mixer EQ Techniques#
DJ mixer EQ is primarily used for frequency separation during transitions:
- Bass swaps: Cut the outgoing track's LOW while fading in the incoming track's LOW
- Kick collision prevention: When two kicks play simultaneously, cut one track's LOW to prevent the boomy buildup
- Mid management: When vocals or synth melodies clash, reduce MID on the less important track
Mastering EQ: A Different Tool Entirely#
Mastering EQ serves a completely different purpose than DJ mixer EQ.
Mastering EQ Characteristics#
- Subtle adjustments: Typically ±0.5–2dB of change
- High-quality curves: Linear phase EQ with minimal phase distortion
- Overall balance correction: Adjusts the entire mix's frequency profile, not individual instruments
Typical Mastering EQ Moves#
| Processing | Frequency | Amount | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| High-pass filter | 30Hz | -infinity | Remove useless sub-rumble |
| Low shelf cut | 80Hz | -1dB | Tighten the low end |
| Bell cut | 300Hz | -1.5dB | Remove muddiness |
| High shelf boost | 10kHz | +1dB | Add air and openness |
DeckReady's EQ Processing#
DeckReady applies mastering-grade EQ automatically. Each preset uses a different EQ curve optimized for its target use case.
Club Ready Preset#
- Below 30Hz: High-pass filter removes unnecessary sub-frequencies
- 40–80Hz: Sub-bass presence preserved for club subwoofers
- 200–400Hz: Gentle cut in the muddy region
- 2–4kHz: Light presence boost for front-of-mix clarity
- Above 10kHz: Air added for an open, spacious sound
Bass Heavy Preset#
- 40–100Hz: Low-end emphasis (+2–3dB equivalent)
- 100–200Hz: Fine-tuning for kick and bass separation
- 2–6kHz: High-end clarity maintained to balance the bass boost
Warm Analog Preset#
- 80–200Hz: Warm low-end boost
- 1–3kHz: Gentle cut for analog-style texture
- Above 8kHz: Gradual rolloff to tame digital harshness
Training Your Ears to Hear Frequencies#
Using EQ effectively requires learning to identify frequency bands by ear.
The Sweep EQ Method#
- Set up one band on a parametric EQ
Narrow the Q (bandwidth) and boost gain to about +10dB 3. Slowly sweep the frequency from low to high 4. Consciously listen to what's being emphasized at each position
Repeat this exercise to build an "ear memory" of what each frequency range contains.
Recommended Training Tools#
- SoundGym: Online ear training platform
- Train Your Ears: EQ-focused training software
- quiztones: iOS app for quick frequency training
Genre-Specific Frequency Profiles#
Different genres emphasize different frequency bands. Knowing your genre's profile makes EQ decisions more intuitive.
| Genre | Priority Bands | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Techno / Tech House | 40–60Hz, 2–4kHz | Tight low-end, percussive clarity |
| Dubstep | 30–80Hz | Extremely heavy sub-bass |
| Deep House | 80–200Hz, 6–12kHz | Warm lows, airy highs |
| Drum & Bass | 40–60Hz, 4–8kHz | Crisp lows, aggressive mid-highs |
| Trance | 200–500Hz, 8–16kHz | Thick mids, brilliant highs |
| Hip-Hop | 50–100Hz, 1–3kHz | Fat 808s, vocal presence |
DeckReady's presets account for these genre characteristics. Bass Heavy suits dubstep and hip-hop, Club Ready fits techno and house, and Warm Analog is ideal for deep house and ambient.
Final Thoughts#
Understanding frequency bands is the foundation of better sound for both DJs and producers. Knowing what each band from sub-bass to air contributes to the music transforms EQ operation from guesswork into intentional decision-making.
DJ mixer EQ is for live mix manipulation. Mastering EQ is for final audio refinement. And DeckReady's preset EQ curves optimize your tracks for club-ready frequency balance without manual effort.
Start by critically listening to tracks in your own library and noticing the frequency balance differences. That awareness is the first step toward genuine sound quality craftsmanship.
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