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| quote: | Originally posted by derail
It is critical to get the main sounds in place and working together. Before you even touch any eq, effects or other audio processors, make sure the sounds all work well together - not just the kick in relation to the bass, but the kick in relation to the pad, the kick in relation to the lead, the bass in relation to the lead, the bass in relation to the percussion, and so on. If any element is off, it'll throw off the mix.
Choosing sounds that work well together gets a lot easier with experience, with familiarity with one's sound sources.
When I start a mix, I use the first two hours or so finding a set of sounds that works really well together without any additional processing being done to them. Then I usually take a small break, recalibrate my ears by listening to some quality productions and make a decision as to whether or not to proceed with the mix. I'd much rather scrap it after investing two hours than spend the full ten or so hours to turn it into a finished song.
(Of course, it's annoying losing even those two hours - I'm always learning about the way I put sounds together, so my vision of what I'm after and how to go about getting it is becoming clearer, before I even enter the studio...though sometimes the choice of lead sound will come from playing with an inspiring synth sound... meh, it's an interesting journey, I have so much to learn...) |
Great advice mate, in my post I was actually relating to your tips with reagrds to scrapping a project after so much time.
How long do you take to recalibrate your ears? Also when you say main sounds do you include percs in this? I assume yes. With my track i got bass main melody another lead and perc's, I got stuck on effects, which is odd, but it threw me off and just went round in cirlces changing other parts of the track.
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