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Yep Rann, caution needs to be taken with low bass /main bass being widened. As I said, my main bass is usually mono in the centre, because there's a danger of all the low end power suddenly disappearing on the dance floor...
RobertAllen, I generally have a stereo plugin set up on my master channel, bypassed. Then I can quickly check the entire mix, or a solo'd sound, by enabling that plugin for a moment. It's set to make the mix completely mono, and extremely quiet. That, combined with some extreme filtering to remove everything except the midrange, is my best check for a good mix. In terms of being concerned about your mixes sounding "thin", the best advice I can give you is to focus on the midrange. Make sure you can still hear what your bass is doing if you cut out everything under 500Hz. Make sure your leads still have enough weight /body to them (that is, don't cut too much low end away).
If you can still hear all your sounds coming through when your song is in mono, at very low volume, and you've cut pretty much everything under 500Hz and everything over 2000Hz, your song's going to sound good in just about every situation. Get it sounding good (and thick and powerful) in mono before you start enhancing the mix in stereo.
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