I asked Claude A.I.
The answer feels right to me.
A kick drum's fundamental frequency sits around 50–100 Hz, with the "punch" or attack transient carrying significant energy up to 1–5 kHz.
For a speaker to accurately reproduce a kick drum, it needs to cover:
20–80 Hz — the deep sub-bass "thud" and body of the drum
80–200 Hz — the main fundamental punch and warmth
200 Hz–2 kHz — the mid-range "click" of the beater hitting the head
2–5 kHz — the attack transient definition and presence
In practice, a speaker needs to faithfully reproduce roughly 30 Hz to 5 kHz for a convincing kick drum sound, though the most critical range is 50–500 Hz.
A woofer or subwoofer alone won't do it — you also need a mid-range driver to capture the beater click that gives the kick its definition and "cut."
WGH,
You summed it up nicely! As a percussionist, I couldn't have decribed the bass drum characteristics better myself.
Here are a few other factors, that either contribute or not, obtaining the "Gut Kick."
For example:
Studio recording and production makes a difference. I've heard many songs where the bass drum kick was lifeless, contributing very little dynamics to the song, where the "Gut Kick" was no where to be found.
Microphone Selection & Transient Response Different microphones have varying diaphragm weights. A large-diaphragm dynamic microphone captures low-end weight, while a sub-kick mic or a small-diaphragm condenser captures the beater "snap."
Dynamic Range & Compression used, affect the transient peak of a drum strike, demands serious headroom. However, heavily compressed or "brickwall limited" tracks, can flatten this dynamic impact, stripping away the visceral thump.
EQ & Phase, is another facctor, that either boosts or cuts in the low-end frequencies. For example, boosting 60Hz and 4kHz) shape the sound. Extreme EQ can alter the phase of the audio waveform, leading to smeared percussive attacks.
Transient influencers, producers often use envelope shapers to artificially enhance or shorten the initial attack and the sustain tail of the drum. It's very subjective, how this is approached by the producers. What they may like, doesn't always equate as the perfect score! How many times have you heard songs produced poorly?
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Beyond the studio, here's what you can control, improving bass reproduction.
Quality of Source material, like bit depth & sample rate and mastering of format too. I'll keep this area brief, but you get the gist.
Preamplifier & Amplifier have serious influences on bass reproduction, as well as many other outside electronic, electrical Influences. The preamp, delivers the purity & detail. The amp delivers the power and headroom, for that massive demand, a kick drum requires. The amp should also dampen convincingly, by starting and stopping drivers on a dime. This contributes to the "Gut Kick".
The speaker system itself, plays a vital role translating electrical signals into acoustical wave forms.
Enclosure types, sealed, ported, or OB driver size plays a role. Agreeing with WGH, addressing the frequency character of a bass drum goes beyond the subwoofer, frequency range. For example, I hear details of my drums, even beyond what a microphone can pick up.
Drivers play a role too, larger drivers deliver fundamental notes. While smaller drivers provide improved beater definition coming from the drum pedal, as well as improved drum shell, head resonance decay reproduction.
Your listening room, plays a significant role! Room modes, standing waves, distortion from things rattling, even furniture resonances.
Noisey boundaries beyond your listening room, will increased the noise floor, not enabling to hear the beater or drum decay.
Speaker placement can provide either muddy bass, or articulate bass drum reproduction.
Lastly room treatment, provides the ultimate control of all frequencies, although bass, can really can mess up the entire portrait of music, if not treated correctly. Imagine a drumset, played in a room with untreated walls, ceiling and floor, in a 10'x10" room. It will overpower the room, booming with no articulation, of how bass drums really sound like. Treating the room will signicantly improve the accuracy, of a drumset.
All the above can assist with achieving, the "Gut Kick." Granted you can't do much with the source material produced from the studio. However, I thought I would share a few basic's, that can manipulate or contribute to how a song is produced. As you can see there are many other factors that can influence accurate bass reproduction. These are only a few examples listed.