Hey Brian, yes. The splitter on the drum bus is parallel compression. I used the fat channel. Just did a video two weeks back on my exact settings on this.
Hey Chuck, I don't usually normalize any of my tracks in the mixing phase. I like the input gain because you have a little bit more control especially if the track is too quiet and you don't wanna bring the fader above 0 dB. Does that help?
Hey Chuck, to be honest I don't normally use normalization. I like to use compressors and limiters so you can tweak things more specifically. Normalization is usually more of an automated process To make sure all the tracks are the same level.@@ChuckSturgeonMusic
Great quick tutorial. Looks like you have a splitter on the drum buss, is that for parallel processing and if so, what is your chain there? :)
Hey Brian, yes. The splitter on the drum bus is parallel compression. I used the fat channel. Just did a video two weeks back on my exact settings on this.
@@MillerMusic I missed that one. Will go check it out. Been trying to get some skiing in before Mt Spokane turns back to dirt 😎
are you using only the stock plugins to mix the track? especially the song in this video?
Yes, just stock plug-ins from Studio One.
would you normalize any of your tracks? or just use the input gain?
Hey Chuck, I don't usually normalize any of my tracks in the mixing phase. I like the input gain because you have a little bit more control especially if the track is too quiet and you don't wanna bring the fader above 0 dB. Does that help?
@@MillerMusic when would you want to use normalization?
Hey Chuck, to be honest I don't normally use normalization. I like to use compressors and limiters so you can tweak things more specifically. Normalization is usually more of an automated process To make sure all the tracks are the same level.@@ChuckSturgeonMusic