My favorite comic book character growing up was Spiderman.
Although the old Adam West Batman series introduced me to superheroes, Spiderman was definitely a childhood favorite.
He was a down to earth neurotic nerd with teenage girl problems so obviously I could relate.
And funnily enough, I just found out that Spiderman's first appearance was on August 10th, 1962 so he shares my birthday which oddly makes sense somehow.
However, Batman is a close second.
Those Adam West TV shows really made their mark so it's always been a struggle to pick between Batman and Spiderman.
But there's something about Batman's abilities that are more admirable.
If you look past the whole "I have limitless money to buy gear" he's really a self-made hero.
Especially when it comes to his skills.
He can't just buy his League of Assassins ninja skills. He has to put in the work.
And practicing to become the World's Greatest Detective takes time.
There's one scene in one of the comics that hints that he literally knows exactly what's going on at all times.
They call it watching the city breathe.
To me that sounds insane.
That means he's memorized every single street in Gotham, like a crazy London cabbie with a cowl.
From the general traffic routes to the location of every single trash can...
Imagine being trained as Robin when all you do is sit on a rooftop and look at a city all night...😴
No wonder the Robin turnover is so great! The nightshifts would make you crazy enough to put on a yellow and green suit and beat up bad guys?!?
Imagine you knew every single thing about every street in a large city?
That's like knowing how every single frequency reacts to every instrument so you know exactly where to pinpoint your EQ to make your mixes stand out.
That means that every time you're mixing your tracks and you need to create separation between your instruments, you'll know exactly where to EQ to make your mixes sound better.
Luckily for you, you don't have to do all the work of memorizing what each frequency sounds like because I've done it for you.
That's what you'll learn inside my breakdown of the frequency spectrum inside EQ Strategies - Your Ultimate Guide to EQ.
It's kind of like a map of your mixes where you can find where the muddiness lives, where boxiness breathes and where to cut and boost to make certain frequency areas a better place.
Then when you've referred to my map multiple times you'll start to know exactly where each frequency lives and breathes.
That's probably as close as you can get to super-heroic hearing skills and this weekend is the best time to improve your EQ skills because you can get 40% off my EQ Strategies if you buy now.
Hit the link below to get started, and remember to use the code EQ40 to get 40% off!
www.EQStrategies.net