|
It takes time.
Keep producing, keep referencing your songs against great sounding songs. Listen to the intros of songs (which generally have fewer sounds playing) and compare them to your intros. Once you have those elements in place, listen to how the other sounds you then bring in interact with the sounds you already have.
Generally, all of us start off not realizing how important it is to cut away the parts of each sound which aren't important to that sound in the context of the mix. So we leave a whole bunch of sub, low and mid frequencies in there (and a few high frequencies) which aren't required, and that ends up muddying up our mixes.
It gets easier with time. It's all related to mixing, not mastering. Start looking at mastering when your mixes already sound clear, detailed, powerful. Mixing will help you get fantastic results, mastering can't help to anywhere near the same degree.
|