Mixing Tips
Mar. 18th, 2019 06:30 amI had a friend ask me for music mixing tips recently because he was super frustrated with the process and his results (because it's a super frustrating process). The following lengthy diatribe is adapted from an email I sent him. I thought it would be useful to keep this stuff around for my own reference. I am, after all, staring down another mixing project here in a couple of months...
( Lengthy diatribe in here... )
Related: I have to admit I feel a little bit of dread about mixing my next project. My songwriting partner, D, is a great guy and I am extremely lucky to work with him. However, he has a) very specific ideas about how he wants things to sound, and b) the most peculiar set of vocabulary to describe them. Like when he told me he'd like to hear more clarity in the bass in our music. So I asked him to send me an example of a recording that sounded the way he wanted it to, and he sent me this track wherein the bass was all low subsonic rumble with the highs rolled off and no attack whatsoever--it sounded like a synth. Or the time he told me that he wished we could make a certain part more percussive but that he'd also like to take some of the attack out. Or the time he told me he wanted something to sound more compressed, and, after twenty minutes of wrangling, I figured out that by "more compressed" he meant "less compressed." One time I listened to some music in his car, and he's that asshole who always cranks the bass and the highs and leaves them that way in every rental car I get, so all I can hear is this sizzling shrieky hi-hat while the kick drum evacuates my bowels.
He is also the only person in history ever to say, "Can you make this sound more digital?"
We laugh about this shit together, and I give him a hard time, but he really does have a great ear and the music comes out better. It sure is rough getting there, though. Divided by a common language and all that.
( Lengthy diatribe in here... )
Related: I have to admit I feel a little bit of dread about mixing my next project. My songwriting partner, D, is a great guy and I am extremely lucky to work with him. However, he has a) very specific ideas about how he wants things to sound, and b) the most peculiar set of vocabulary to describe them. Like when he told me he'd like to hear more clarity in the bass in our music. So I asked him to send me an example of a recording that sounded the way he wanted it to, and he sent me this track wherein the bass was all low subsonic rumble with the highs rolled off and no attack whatsoever--it sounded like a synth. Or the time he told me that he wished we could make a certain part more percussive but that he'd also like to take some of the attack out. Or the time he told me he wanted something to sound more compressed, and, after twenty minutes of wrangling, I figured out that by "more compressed" he meant "less compressed." One time I listened to some music in his car, and he's that asshole who always cranks the bass and the highs and leaves them that way in every rental car I get, so all I can hear is this sizzling shrieky hi-hat while the kick drum evacuates my bowels.
He is also the only person in history ever to say, "Can you make this sound more digital?"
We laugh about this shit together, and I give him a hard time, but he really does have a great ear and the music comes out better. It sure is rough getting there, though. Divided by a common language and all that.