10 Things I Wish I Knew When I Started Mixing

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 พ.ค. 2024
  • I'm sharing 10 things I wish I had known when I was a beginner - so you can skip some of the struggle, save time and improve faster in the studio.
    ☛ Learn the go-to starting points for EQ and compression in heavy mixes with my FREE Mixing Cheatsheet: mixcheatsheet.com
    Watch This Next: 17 Noob Mixing Mistakes • 17 Noob Mixing MISTAKE...
    Music I’ve Worked On: open.spotify.com/playlist/6I7...
    Website: hardcoremusicstudio.com
    -------------------------
    MY FAVORITE GEAR:
    Computer / Interface:
    Mac M1 Studio Max sweetwater.sjv.io/anOMOo
    Avid Carbon sweetwater.sjv.io/ZQ6M6g
    Apogee Duet 3 sweetwater.sjv.io/y2qXqb
    Monitors / Headphones:
    Avantone CLA-10a sweetwater.sjv.io/WqyMyZ
    Audio Technica ATH-M50 sweetwater.sjv.io/PyOMON
    Microphones:
    Shure SM57 sweetwater.sjv.io/daOMy7
    AKG D112 sweetwater.sjv.io/Kj0MBy
    Sennheiser e604 sweetwater.sjv.io/DKyvWa
    Shure SM7b sweetwater.sjv.io/5g5vk3
    AKG C451b sweetwater.sjv.io/jre9Rv
    Shure SM81 sweetwater.sjv.io/eK1LnD
    Audio Technica AT4050 sweetwater.sjv.io/JzKMqr
    Preamps/Outboard:
    API 3124 sweetwater.sjv.io/eK1LRD
    EL8 Distressor sweetwater.sjv.io/XYmMd4
    Favorite Plugins:
    BSA Clipper blacksaltaudio.com/clipper
    Escalator blacksaltaudio.com/escalator
    Low Control blacksaltaudio.com/low-control
    Waves SSL Bundle waves.alzt.net/dMd4q
    Waves CLA Compressors waves.alzt.net/0va0P
    Waves Platinum waves.alzt.net/jxz2M
    Slate Trigger 2 sweetwater.sjv.io/MmAM53
    SoundToys Rack sweetwater.sjv.io/xkLgyd
    Auto-tune Pro sweetwater.sjv.io/OreMYr
    Vocalign Project sweetwater.sjv.io/xkLgyA
    Cranesong Phoenix II sweetwater.sjv.io/PyOMrz
    Instruments / Amps:
    Ludwig Black Beauty Snare sweetwater.sjv.io/1r9vDR
    Gibson Les Paul sweetwater.sjv.io/B0nvz1
    Evertune Guitars sweetwater.sjv.io/WqyM6P
    Fender Jazz Bass sweetwater.sjv.io/nLX5R6
    Sansamp Bass Driver DI sweetwater.sjv.io/OreM9Q
    EVH 5150 sweetwater.sjv.io/4PGvr9
    Mesa 2x12 cab sweetwater.sjv.io/75avGA
  • เพลง

ความคิดเห็น • 371

  • @DrProgNerd
    @DrProgNerd ปีที่แล้ว +254

    #10) Accept the Journey: After years of gigging, I finally got sick of band drama, and gave it up. But I still love making music - so I bought some instrument plugins and started learning how to compose in a DAW. Being an older guy who's just starting out could be daunting - but the freedom from having to fight for my ideas in a band is just too alluring to pass up. I've hit so many bumps in the road. There's so much I don't know - but screw it - I'm having fun. I just try to learn a couple of new things every day. Your videos have opened my eyes to so much. Thank you.

    • @TachyBunker
      @TachyBunker ปีที่แล้ว

      Carpenter Brut? Lol

    • @imremozsik1012
      @imremozsik1012 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Bro, I had the same deal! Played the drums in bands for almost fourty years, then got fed up, built a small studio, bought plugins and started learning studio engineering. Best decision of my life. Cheers! Good luck to you!

    • @karolk9walski946
      @karolk9walski946 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @Xequalswhat Having fun on your own and ability to analytically rethink everything you do is is the best part of being a late bloomer, good luck bro

    • @Dave-Rough-Diamond-Dunn
      @Dave-Rough-Diamond-Dunn ปีที่แล้ว +4

      My journey is slightly different. I was in a band in high school, but with a guitarist 11 years older than me. Instead of finishing high school, I attended the School of Audio Engineering for a year. I did live work for a while, but it clashed too much with gigging so I gave it up after a couple of years. I did set a PA up now and then and set a static mix, if our engineer couldn't show, but not regularly. Then, at 49, I moved 300kms away, so that was the end of the regular gigging.
      Then, at 51, my daughter bought me an interface, and gave me her laptop.
      It's changed my life, and gave me some of that 'spark' back!
      I bought interfaces for two of the guitarists from the band, so hopefully we can collaborate, but having to play 3 guitar parts, and anything else I want to add, has been a good experience. My guitar playing hadn't really progressed at all since high school, since most times I'd just play rhythm in the lead breaks.
      Learning how to record on a DAW, rather than analogue, has given me a challenge I needed!

    • @WaltherSuk
      @WaltherSuk ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Half of the musicians in my hometown, and everywhere I've lived, lead very self-destructive lifes. Too much alcohol during practising, snorting all kinds of stuff and messing up their musical aspirations with all that; I hate it. And since I am mostly on my own, my DAW gives me the opportunity to create the music to my likings.
      On the other hand, I miss the interaction of playing together. My neighbor won't let me have a drummer and a bass player and me on guitar at the same time, although it is possible with most systems. But you can layer your tracks in a home studio, and, very nice too, collaborate over the web. I love my DAW 🎉

  • @Babaksaeedi
    @Babaksaeedi ปีที่แล้ว +100

    I have over 30 years of experience as a musician and over 13 years of experience in mixing. If you take the time to truly comprehend the advice given in this video, you can save yourself years of frustration and avoid wasting your time. Great video!

    • @WaltherSuk
      @WaltherSuk ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This is just the confirmation for me to know that I'm on the right track with this fellow.

  • @chrisburkhardt4902
    @chrisburkhardt4902 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    Tip #10. I absolutely love this. I actually had a mentor tell me this exact thing. She said something akin to "You've reached that point where it's an inverse bell curve. You're going to hate every single one of your mixes even though they are good. You'll keep getting better and better until finally you come out to the other side where you start liking your mixes again. And it'll feel like you can mix happily again. So just ride out the bell curve." And she was right. I still pick apart my mixes and think there are things I want to do better, but i'm starting to like my mixes again.

  • @jasonthomas2393
    @jasonthomas2393 ปีที่แล้ว +68

    Performance and editing can't be overstated. The bass, kick, and guitars all hitting at the same time makes an incredible difference

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Just be sure to not make them exactly perfectly at the same time because otherwise that sounds boring and robotic.

    • @ryanclark8343
      @ryanclark8343 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Phase is magic

    • @davidharrison5873
      @davidharrison5873 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Forcing a performance to a grid can entirely destroy the pocket and feel of good musicians.

    • @jasonthomas2393
      @jasonthomas2393 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@davidharrison5873 that isn't what I said to do

    • @davidharrison5873
      @davidharrison5873 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@jasonthomas2393 if you edit performances so everyone is hitting beats at the same time, what else are you doing? You can't have that *and* pocket. If the musicians simply can't play very well and they don't have a consistent pocket then fair enough, but otherwise exactly simultaneous playing will kill the groove.

  • @randnewiger6542
    @randnewiger6542 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    In my humble opinion, I believe 99.9% of the time a great mix starts with a great song followed by a great performance played with feeling. There's always going to be something to find in a mix, but a good song will always stand out no matter what, which is why when I mix a song that just doesn't have it, played sloppily, etc. it is very difficult to craft a good mix.

    • @RAILWAY_FILMS
      @RAILWAY_FILMS ปีที่แล้ว +2

      yeah you can tell when tons of people 100% agree with a list yet these people aren't all cranking out stuff.. how they they know they agree???? great song + solid instruments + proper tuning + REHEARSAL is the first step. but he said a couple of things that are just not so.. ( IN MY OPINION).. there are some key technical things I was listening for and didn't hear and I heard a couple of things I avoid at all cost but hey : its whatever you want.. I mean I have heard songs on the radio with HORRIBLE recordings. it's not all your recording that gets you signed.. a lot of it is politics and work ethic etc. there are hits where cheesy midi drums were used. there are hits where HORRIBLE sounding guitar amp models were used (sounds fake and brittle and bit crushed kinda like if you took a regualar 1980's distortion pedal and plugged the output directly into a Pa live instead of playing through an amp). Embarrassingly bad recordings that went multi platinum.. the engineer did eq the hell out of it so it didn't sound quite as harsh but you could hear what it was and it wasn't good.. its like ? you couldn't find an amp and a mic????? and maybe with their issues, maybe they just couldn't. OR maybe they wanted to flex their muscles and show "hey look, we're so big we can do whatever and still sell millions of copies"

    • @perfectlygoodslouch5212
      @perfectlygoodslouch5212 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree totally, Robert Johnson's recordings were, rough and mono and they still sound cool today, because Robert Johnson sounded cool...RIP Gordon Lightfoot

  • @risingphoenix1484
    @risingphoenix1484 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Most important part of a mix is………THE PERFORMANCE

  • @patrickmckiernan2742
    @patrickmckiernan2742 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Hearing the mix on different speakers outside of your studio is truly enlightening. Like you, I began using my IEMs. I will add that regardless of even the optimal monitoring system, we all can get "ear fatigue". Going back in after a good night's sleep will sometimes reveal the worst blemishes almost immediately.

  • @ilyap3011
    @ilyap3011 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Number 10 is exactly something I’ve been through recently. I was so depressed, thought all my experience just got me to do things worse than before. But then after some speaking with more experienced engineers I found myself doing things better and feeling happy about it. Thank you for the video!

  • @elizabethsteele4633
    @elizabethsteele4633 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Good video . I'm a retired film re recording mixer . One of the things I learned after many years was that often the solution to improving the sound of a voice or instrument lies in removing some frequencies - not always adding or increasing the EQ . And , at least in movie dialogue , less compression and riding the fader like a maniac sounds much better than setting a compressor and letting it go . And how many hundreds of times a director or producer would insist in adding and adding and making everything louder - to no avail , and once in a while convincing them that " we need to pull back a few things , carve out a little space and then we'll have a place to fit in the tire screeches or the bad guy's breathing " .

  • @davejohnsonmusic
    @davejohnsonmusic ปีที่แล้ว +5

    #9 + #10. Along with that, are session templates and refining them. Every mix I do tends to get better and better, so after it's done, I find myself taking a moment to save/update my tracks presets, bus routing and main template. That way, all the things I learned and refined from the previous mix can be carried over to new projects. It's all about developing a workflow that makes sense to you. Slowly you get to the point when your template has everything you need and your projects get more consistent. That's when you start to see results.

  • @cjthomasmusic
    @cjthomasmusic ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Totally agree with #6. Its funny. I don’t mix rock myself. I’m more in the classical/ambient world. But there’s one reason I actually watch and come back to your videos. Because you mixed some albums that I “grew up” on in my late teens early twenties (ie Silverstein). There are a lot of bedroom producers on TH-cam spewing a bunch of nonsense (or just restating what they’ve heard from another bedroom TH-camr) but when you post a video it’s nice to know that it’s coming from someone that I actually enjoyed his output before discovering on TH-cam.

  • @TheRealCalijokes01
    @TheRealCalijokes01 ปีที่แล้ว

    The going bk to older mixes part, almost a life lesson in music why I love this advice

  • @BrofUJu
    @BrofUJu ปีที่แล้ว

    #3 is so spot on. Editing so your transients and drums line up is so massive.

  • @bartf7231
    @bartf7231 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    'at first you suck but you are happy, then you start to get better and learn more but it starts to feel complicated and depressing, but finally you break through to the other side where there is mastery and you'll be good and happy'
    never heard truer words regarding mixing than these...

  • @resington
    @resington ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You have the best advice man truly! I'm a hobby metal writer mixer etc guy here and I always go with my ears no matter what and when I show my process, I explain and prove everything I say.

  • @coreyhanrahan4541
    @coreyhanrahan4541 ปีที่แล้ว

    I really appreciate your channel! Upon my retirement I needed something to keep me sane. I got back in to playing my guitar and then recording and mixing. If I had known how much I love the whole process I think I would have made a different career choice. I felt your comment about starting with knowing nothing then evolving hits close with me. I can go back to when I first started recording (4yrs ago) and hear the amount of progress I've made. I have friends in the music industry that tell me that I'm doing a great job and each song is better than the last. That keeps me going and learning how to find issues and then knowing or figuring out how to fix them is so rewarding!! Please keep making the great content and I hope all goes well for you! Thanks!

  • @inflam52
    @inflam52 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is probably the best mixing advice video I’ve ever heard. I was checking each of these as you named them. Learned them all the hard way. This video would have saved me so much time when I started 😭 Thanks for this…and those who are starting out mixing listen to this!

  • @twilightbiscuit
    @twilightbiscuit 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    9:41 that's so true. I also believed that there is no such thing a repeating pattern one could use. But after watching tons of videos, just like yours, there really is a formula, yes 🔥🔥

  • @mrcoatsworth429
    @mrcoatsworth429 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Really cranking out great content lately, Jordan! Love it!
    I think of all mixing channels, I probably learned most from you, especially in terms of the mindset. Thank you!
    By the way, I think I'm not the only one who would love another of those one hour mix videos! That was so interesting to watch.

    • @BigMTBrain
      @BigMTBrain ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for mentioning it. I'll look for it now.

  • @artie
    @artie 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The real talk and advice is GOLD! Thank you! I don’t usually subscribe to anyone but your logic and great advice totally got me sold. Everything you’re saying is so true. Thank you once again

  • @jethlaq8678
    @jethlaq8678 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I completely dig your honesty. I believe I've experienced darn near everything you have so truthfully shared. All very valuable insights and suggestions, thank you for such a salient and timeless reminder!

  • @frankiesunswept
    @frankiesunswept ปีที่แล้ว +1

    These kinds of videos are pretty helpful, thanks man. I love the don't be afraid to go extreme one. I have been a/bing my mixes and noticing how gnarly pro mixes can be. I love bad and good sounds haha

  • @davidhayman9330
    @davidhayman9330 ปีที่แล้ว

    As always very helpful and insightful video, thanks Jordan...I think your point about tightness and tuning on the way in and the effect on the mix sticks out the most to me...but all 10 points are much appreciated...

  • @jimvanzino7646
    @jimvanzino7646 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just wanted to say thanks for this. As an old 80’s engineer getting back into mixing these tips truly stand the test of time!

  • @badra9190
    @badra9190 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I appreciate your time, your work, everything in total that you set aside for this and other videos. Advice is always helpful. THANKS Jordan.😉✌

  • @stephenbruce5431
    @stephenbruce5431 ปีที่แล้ว

    This was sooo good! Saving this video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @stockmanager
    @stockmanager ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Performance really can't be overstated theres like a special energy you can put into the micorphones and a good edit is like cutting all those special moments together.

  • @ANARCH3TYPE
    @ANARCH3TYPE ปีที่แล้ว

    Great vid! You nailed the descrip of my journey with the statement at the end. I’m not at that place where it’s easy again but I’m getting there. Eventually!

  • @fytakytemusic
    @fytakytemusic ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great video! - I would add to #1 "stop being afraid... of making mistakes". The irony of YT is that every second mixing/production video is entitled "10 mistakes to avoid blah blah blah etc", and in many people, that just feeds the fear. Everybody HAS to make make mistakes to learn. It's hard to know what "too much" of anything is until you've pushed it "too much"! Sometimes "too much" ain't enough, and sometimes a "mistake" is your quantum leap forward! You'll never know unless you make 'em!

  • @tomverstappendrums3423
    @tomverstappendrums3423 ปีที่แล้ว

    Started watching drummixing videos of this guy when I started to learn how to mix. This guy made me completely get it and actually have fun with it. A rare case of someone who actually takes you somewhere by explaining the 'why' and not the 'what'

  • @Sweetmanthanks
    @Sweetmanthanks ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for pointing out "the formula". Over time I've been able to streamline my recording process by relying on a process (aka formula) that works. Templates, recording techniques, overdub methodology, all of these things become familiar and the processes become reliable over time and it's awesome to be able to rely on them without pretending each song is it's own universe of sound.

  • @edwardkenemorales
    @edwardkenemorales ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Jordan's take on gear (plugins in my case) is so true. If I would've known, I would not have bought all the plugins I have and just concentrated on training my ears

  • @GrimaldiSound
    @GrimaldiSound 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    100% agree with you on the 'forumula'. Finding out what works for YOU is SO important. Doing the same things all the time that work = consistency. It makes it simple when you finally find what clicks for your personal work flow. People often ask me 'how do you get the vocals (or whatever) sound like that? What's your 'chain'? Just because my personal chain gets me awesome results, doesn't mean it's going to work for you, or anybody really!
    Keep up the great videos!

  • @user-de5vb2po5z
    @user-de5vb2po5z 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ok - you're cool. It's awesome to find someone authentically sharing their experience with a clear sense of - "Do what works (for you)" etc. Thanks for this! (you have a new subscriber)

  • @DavidDavis-FA-photog
    @DavidDavis-FA-photog ปีที่แล้ว

    This video is just what I needed. Thanks for share your experience with us.

  • @BrianLarney
    @BrianLarney 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    IMO, #3 should have been #1. When I started to pay more attention to the performances, specifically timing and tuning, the skies opened up. My mixes made a quantum leap in quality.

  • @JayKayProductions
    @JayKayProductions ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Agree 100% with everything. Great video and a good reminder what to focus and what not to focus on. #10 is super important 🤓

  • @richwebster117
    @richwebster117 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    For me, Many of the points resonate with me - there is was initially a lot of fear, like all the time it felt as if I was being judged from afar by all the great masters; and everyone on TH-cam was an expert. It took a while, but what helped was getting reall with everything - finding a great mentor helped me find both humility and confidence to overcome that fear. I'm only 3 years into my journey and recognised the 'breakthrough point' - my mixes do have a formula now, but the greatest realisation is that there will always be something to learn.

  • @Partybob1
    @Partybob1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    All your comments “hit home”
    I experimented for your years
    and realized that I have “formula” that I start with that works well on a variety of music styles. My gut tells me to do it then I should do what it’s telling me. Thanks for your video

  • @davidlawrence3560
    @davidlawrence3560 ปีที่แล้ว

    100% true. Embrace the journey 👍🏾

  • @svenolofandersson2572
    @svenolofandersson2572 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have a small studio and a few times per year I record bands/artists, occasionally for free when I feel like it. I don't buy expensive outboard gear, and I already have a bunch of really nice microphones so I am set. What I do buy, however is cables and mic stand gear to be sure that nothing is missing when you have people in the studio. I recently bought 10/6/3 meter cables and headphone extension cables. I also ensure that headphone pads are good and that there are enough sheet music stands for those who need it. Little things that can be really important. I also spend considerable time in advance on planning which instrument goes where, which mics to use and also set up a basic project in the DAW. I hate when you have to spend half a day just wiring everything up.

  • @doranfixeseverything
    @doranfixeseverything 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It's the second time I watch this video and I just realised how damn true what you say in the last few minutes is. I had exactly the same journey and I think you're right everybody does. Thanks so much for giving this advice for free!

  • @Then.
    @Then. ปีที่แล้ว

    These are all really thoughtful, useful tips. Thank you. Subscribed.

  • @OldeBelle
    @OldeBelle ปีที่แล้ว

    Great wisdom - thanks for sharing !!!

  • @thomasshaw3760
    @thomasshaw3760 ปีที่แล้ว

    Accepting the journey is the one which hit home for me. I started with a 003 rack+ on PT 7LE in 2009, recording mainly myself but also various bands in a variety of locations. All the experience mounts up, and intelligent, non-impulsive gear and plugin choices along the way.
    I've been in that gear/plugin trap, and to a certain extent much of it didn't help until I realised what was really making the difference, and what makes for good results. I guess everyone's journey will differ from person to person, and depending on individual circumstances, budget and motivation.
    Now, I've got a solid signal chain, flexibility in and out of the box, and a well-honed workflow. All that took a lot of time outside my full time job, and above all the acceptance that it requires patience, discipline and a consistent degree of effort.
    Thanks for your videos. I'm considering applying for the PPS training, mainly for the career advice, but also to see where my unknown gaps are.

  • @ringomaharaj1268
    @ringomaharaj1268 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video...I think we all started the same way, some dropped out on the way and some stuck it out. It is a long but enjoyable journey.

  • @IanSolano
    @IanSolano ปีที่แล้ว

    Awesome tips and so true! Thank you for brining this to everyones attention.

  • @tristanishtar8906
    @tristanishtar8906 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great advice. Thank you!

  • @66fitton
    @66fitton 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very cool! Lots here that resonates! (no pun intended haha). Especially listening to old mixes and going "wait what!?" Easy to feel like you're wasting time when that happens! Cheers!

  • @illyph9963
    @illyph9963 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    SO TRUE about compression, just fully understanding it period, it’s completely game changing seriously, I been mixing 20 years, took me 15 of those to really start using compression to its full potential lol, parallel is huge too, I really started getting more extreme with my settings using it parallel first, so it was “less scary” cause I always had dry signal there to bail me out lol, but what ended up happening, is overtime I got WAY better at “normal” compression all around, cause once I started doing extreme shit on parallel channels, I really started “hearing” what every setting did, and gave me way better understanding of what I was doing in smaller increments in more normal situations

  • @br00talbr00skeez
    @br00talbr00skeez ปีที่แล้ว

    Inspiring. Very good advice. I think finding an i tuitive formula really hit me. And yes the one piece of gear that matters is speakers. My own experience learning the space recorded, and how well something is recorded (quality of sound and play), can save time too.

  • @sparefuls
    @sparefuls ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you! Very helpful.

  • @filipswiton8455
    @filipswiton8455 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks, this was amazing! ❤

  • @boringbambo
    @boringbambo ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Tip 10. Looks like I'm in the middle of the Journey. I feel exactly as you've described. And I regullary catch depression after hard learning something new, putting big hopes on my new mix made with new knowledge and after all understanding I still suck. It's a big relief to know that this is common thing, and thank you very much for your advice. I just got to admit the Journey is much longer than I thought at the start and keep moving forward. Best regards,

    • @BigMTBrain
      @BigMTBrain ปีที่แล้ว +1

      "I just got to admit the Journey is much longer than I thought at the start and keep moving forward." For you and me both, brother. Thanks for sharing!

  • @jonesnyirenda
    @jonesnyirenda ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Starting out in mixing, guys may pick out flaws in your work, even if your mix is great. Remember that mixing is subjective, trust your instincts, and be confident in what you do. Your unique mix will be appreciated and respected by others.

  • @NealMiskinMusic
    @NealMiskinMusic ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is all good advice! One thing I wish I had known at the beginning of my career is that ultimately my personal taste is what people will actually hire me for. Yes technical proficiency is important, but beyond that you need the confidence that what sounds good to /you/ will generally sound good to other people.

  • @GuitarLessonsNYC1
    @GuitarLessonsNYC1 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is all great advice! #6 totally! I forums there should be a way to always hear the posters work. Forget the “credits” as they can be exaggerated and just because you worked with someone doesn’t make you great. Some people that become popular are very talented, but sometimes it is a popularity contest. Always check the source where the info is coming from. You will be surprised what you find with the biggest loud mouths.
    I stopped going on forums for the same reason. It’s impossible to distinguish the experienced from the hobbyist. Forums can be useless except for troubleshooting.
    You’re a great teacher btw! I’ve watched a number of your videos and I’m impressed with the quality of your content and the way you deliver information. No gimmicks, no baiting, just quality information. I’m a professor of composition and recording and appreciate how you’re stripping away many of the misperceptions about mixing and music. Nice work!

  • @chaiayling9831
    @chaiayling9831 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have to say watching your videos to get back into mixing metal thank you so much, your content is superb !!!!

  • @carlsheperd2471
    @carlsheperd2471 ปีที่แล้ว

    "Breaking through the complexity"... Perfectly stated!!

  • @Zachfitz33
    @Zachfitz33 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    the 6th tip was the most hard to swallow. knowing that that delayed my creativity by 3 years at the beginning of my journey till i woke up and just used my freaking ears

  • @FMwin900
    @FMwin900 ปีที่แล้ว

    I did buy the CLA 10s because of you and I gotta say this is the one piece of gear that really changed things . That and soothe lol 😂

  • @cellardoreproductions
    @cellardoreproductions ปีที่แล้ว

    I started mixing and regularly referencing on my earbuds recently and it’s a game changer.

  • @Zardox-The-Heretic-Slayer
    @Zardox-The-Heretic-Slayer ปีที่แล้ว

    with the forum people, I learned that lesson when I went into their profiles and found out that the only audio that they had were null tests on DAWs and hundreds of posts about how transparent a plugin needs to be.

  • @pro_influence
    @pro_influence 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You nailed those points very well, I also had same experience, but You have those great points. Thank You. ❤

  • @beyondmywildestdreams6942
    @beyondmywildestdreams6942 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amazing video,thanks so much!

  • @sjtheartisan
    @sjtheartisan ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I get asked all the time how I’m able to mix all these different types of genres, and really it’s the same process, with little unique things here and there but for the most part, it’s the same. Nice refresher video for me

  • @mortalflower1
    @mortalflower1 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Good tips! I can especially relate to the last one. I'm trying to get over that one at the moment by simplifying my work flow; trying to do most of the work using only one channel strip, then listen to hear if anything else is needed.

    • @BigMTBrain
      @BigMTBrain ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh, NOW you tell me, AFTER the 100 plugins YOU got and told ME to get. 🤪 Seriously, keen, practical insight, approach, and practice here for a noob like me. Thanks. 👍

  • @cmax4358
    @cmax4358 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    10 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
    I can't tell you how frustrating it is now that I know all of these techniques but everything seems so complicated. Back when I barely know anything it was so much to discover new things and it would sound so good. In my opinion some of the best work I did in my earlier stages, although some would disagree.

  • @soundsymmetrystudioGR
    @soundsymmetrystudioGR ปีที่แล้ว +2

    FANTASTIC VIDEO, I agree on pretty much everything! HOWEVER, regarding #7:
    I invested ALL my (our) wedding gift money to buy a Thermionic Culture Fat Bustard 2 Analog summing mixer. One of the most pricey outboard gear there is out there. Took me a bunch of terrible mixes cause my A-D sucked, so I upgraded on a 2.5K audio interface (Metric Halo LIO 3D) to ensure what goes out comes in at mastering grade quality conversion.
    And then, BOOM there it was. Mixing "kinda" out of the box, elevated my overall sound and perception of things. Same mix inside my Cubase was missing tons of things which I got from mixing out and "printing" it back.
    ->Then it was the monitoring. I used to work with Yamaha HS8's. I've seen people doing great stuff on them, they're on the 500$ ballpark so I said "why not"?
    I never liked them, even if my space is like 70-80% treated. The translation was terrible, I was mostly mixing on some 30$ in-ear type of headphones, just like you said.
    Tried Sonarworks Reference for a while but there was a lot of guesswork to be done there as well.
    Until I won a pair of Amphion Speakers with their dedicated amp. A 4.000$ thing. Now, the word "translation" exists only in translating foreign languages: everything I mix, sounds great and identical on my car, my headphones, even my Marshal living room speaker (where nothing sounds good there,ya know it)
    Of course, it took me ages to go to a point that I, my self like my mixes. And I still believe they suck, until I hear/read awesome reviews about the production and my mind rests for a second.
    BONUS: Your mixing cheat sheet has helped a lot btw, thanks!
    PS. On one of my best releases (Outloud "Outloud" on Frontiers Records) vocals were recorded with a B1 Behringer on a Steinberg card, guitars with a SM57 on a random amp/cab BUT the songs and performance were there ;-)

  • @wileygee
    @wileygee ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice advice dude. Appreciate your wisdom. Cool talk. Love your style.

  • @mikecurry2903
    @mikecurry2903 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent video! Thank you.

  • @DiziDoberman
    @DiziDoberman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Even years in, I feel like I'm at a stage in my journey where I ought to just save this video and watch it every so often. Thanks for this.

  • @gravityfreaksmusic
    @gravityfreaksmusic 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This, folks, is pure gold! I ran into ALL of these traps and it's mostly just a matter of gear and no fear.

  • @qbanking
    @qbanking ปีที่แล้ว

    Very good advice, simple to understand

  • @Joelfrancis
    @Joelfrancis ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for these contents. I’m following your advises

  • @cbrooks0905
    @cbrooks0905 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Accepting the journey is definitely the hardest one. I’ll often pull up old mixes back from when “I didn’t know what I was doing” and I’m blown away by how good they actually sound. I no longer try to remix old projects that turned out good, or even ok, because I can never beat the old mixes. I’ve learned that it doesn’t make a difference if I know more now than I did then. Clearly I knew enough to get it to a point where I was ok with it, so trying to redo it is always going to be like covering a song for me. Even though it’s fun, and may even sound ok, it never sounds better than the original.

  • @SHARt_murmur
    @SHARt_murmur ปีที่แล้ว

    Number 6 in general, great life advice.

  • @iam-music
    @iam-music 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great vid...appreciate when experience is shared and I relate to it well. I had the advantage of my next door neighbour managing one of the largest studios in Australia and directing me to a lot of stuff ie I bought dt 770/hd600 back in 2005...still using them and you get what you pay for. Monitors and the journey of midrange brought me to a 'Monet' moment which Im writing about at the moment...it of all things changed things the most....much like your NS10 vibe...but its about macro/micro imvhexperience. RE crazy eq moves...he showed my upfront that subtracting was just as powerful as adding :-)...put the 2 together and its unlikely you never need to use 2 serial eq hehe. Thanks again

  • @dkpitt3912
    @dkpitt3912 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Another brilliant post

  • @Filipmarinchev72
    @Filipmarinchev72 ปีที่แล้ว

    You are absolutely right !!!!

  • @demetriusstump8654
    @demetriusstump8654 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    “Gear is not the problem or the solution”
    My drum set is a PDP Z5 series that I bought new back in 2009, CAD drum mics, Epiphone SG Pro (2013), Digitech RP500, cheap entry-level Ibanez bass guitar, 2013 model Yamaha DGX keyboard and just recently purchased (and most expensive) Zoom LiveTrak L-20
    I do a mix down on the LiveTrak or move the files to GarageBand and work from there
    It’s just fun to work on mixes, even though I know it’s nowhere near professional-sounding, but it’s getting better and better!

  • @DreTheEngineer
    @DreTheEngineer ปีที่แล้ว

    all but tip 10 is real. Getting better comes w serious anxiety and depression, but once you hit that comfort/"mastery" its smooth sailing

  • @matthewhoffman4675
    @matthewhoffman4675 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is the most important video I have ever watched about mixing.

  • @chaiayling9831
    @chaiayling9831 ปีที่แล้ว

    I would also say with 4) monitoring that having a good sound card (good input and output convertors as opposed to price) is really usefull too ! but all these tips are great !

  • @chizzulwinduh1941
    @chizzulwinduh1941 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video dude, thank you

  • @jhummelgaard9310
    @jhummelgaard9310 ปีที่แล้ว

    The last tip was really great!

  • @dwaynearthur1476
    @dwaynearthur1476 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good advice 👍🏾. Be honest with your self , use what you have , refine your skills and move from there . Progression will come eventually .

  • @musicgood2747
    @musicgood2747 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent topics and views!

  • @schlapbe
    @schlapbe ปีที่แล้ว

    0h man! Thank you so much for this video! I am in the industry for about 25years no and I second every word you say! Thank you for sharing!

  • @bulletproofzest
    @bulletproofzest ปีที่แล้ว

    Man, the thing about following online forums... your example of the 421 hit home. When I first started I bought three of them because everyone said they were the best on toms. But I just found myself never liking them. Kick? yes, Bass cab? yes, but on toms, the First time I tried a condenser I was like "whoa, there it is," then when I mic'd top and bottom it went to a whole new level. There are so many ways to accomplish things that it's important you are constantly trying new things and seeing how they work for you. Tons of guys love the 57. I hate it. That doesn't mean they don't get amazing tones; many of the very best have been recorded with one; I just so happen not to enjoy the results with it myself. and that's the beauty of this craft. Recording and mixing is just this really fun laboratory where you get to figure out things that work for your style and taste.
    I remember after I'd been at this awhile, I went back and listened to the first album I'd ever done, just as sort of a progress check, fully expecting to laugh at my early efforts, but instead I was kinda blown away. Sure, the sounds were not anywhere near what I could do by that point, but on the other hand I'd made some really, really bold, creative, and interesting mix choices that enhanced the songs. But it seems in the pursuit of getting better sounds and worrying about consistency that I'd lost touch with the creative side. Returning to that first album was a real wakeup call to not get too too caught up in what the crowd says. I think it's important not to take anything someone says as dogma. Nor be dogmatic about approaches yourself. It can be a helpful guide but common wisdom is not always wise.

  • @pawel9450
    @pawel9450 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you !!!🤘😎

  • @edwinmdunge3919
    @edwinmdunge3919 ปีที่แล้ว

    So much right bro
    thanks

  • @thomasheimer3578
    @thomasheimer3578 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Good video! These tips are generally basic but often disrespected. Learn to know your workspace and DAW to feel comfortable while mixing. Everything is allowd as long it sounds good in the end! There are no rules, just guidedlines. Most important: learn to mix without using any plugins but just EQ. A good engineer will archive a better sound with crappy gear compared to an average engineer with gear worth a million. I started in the 90s on a Monarc Mixer with an awful 3 band EQ and horrible monitors but it teached me how to get the best out of it. I Always checked the mixed in my dad's car and it helped a lot.

  • @coltonrudd
    @coltonrudd ปีที่แล้ว

    Aside from the legends, you're the only guy on this platform that I believe TRULY knows what he's talking about. You can hear it in your mixes and that alone is the proof. Thanks for sharing all that you do JV.

  • @jeramiahrossnz
    @jeramiahrossnz ปีที่แล้ว

    the thing I found the hardest to overcome is that it doesn't need to be complicated, you are making music for people that mostly have no idea about how it was created or what plugin you are using, speakers, microphones, instruments, ideas and concepts, mixing approaches, compression, dynamics, eqs, what studio, how, when why etc... all that matters to people that listen is if it sounds good and they like it, connect to it, and accepting that whatever you create not everyone will like it, but some people will and trying your best with what you understand at the time, it's an ongoing skillset evolution, 2 steps forward and back and sideways, but when whatever process you have decided to follow for yourself, when you export that final mix, share it and people like and connect to it, You have made it...the music :)

  • @stevenm78
    @stevenm78 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Your list is so…. True to the point! I think that the internet leads way to many of us in the wrong direction. So many people have their ideas and are set in their ways. If you want to do yourself a huge benefit… use your ears and use your mind. Some things are a given right…. Or are they? No one gets good without a lot of practice and most never create something new and exciting when copying someone else all the time! Learn the basics and then be you and be creative.

  • @JustinColletti
    @JustinColletti ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I 100% agree with this list. In fact I’ve probably also made a video with just about exactly the same list before as well 😆
    Only difference is you do it better, with more b roll, a better camera shot and much more concisely.
    If anyone ever wants a long winded version with worse videography, I’m always here to help! 😂

    • @woodciaran
      @woodciaran ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Really like your videos and podcasts too

    • @BigMTBrain
      @BigMTBrain ปีที่แล้ว

      From @woodciaran 's endorsement, your comment here, and the subsequent venture to your channel to discover your "Mini Masterclass: EQing Your Masters (The right way...)" ( th-cam.com/video/Y9JL0YvwqCw/w-d-xo.html ), ... new subscriber! Thanks to you both!

    • @JustinColletti
      @JustinColletti ปีที่แล้ว

      @@woodciaran Thanks! So glad to have you tuning in.

  • @BradDollar
    @BradDollar 20 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Love this! Thanks for sharing man. Any and all tips are welcome 😅

  • @orbitaldecaystudios2424
    @orbitaldecaystudios2424 ปีที่แล้ว

    Awesome video man. I made a lot of these same mistakes.

  • @hardcoremusicstudio
    @hardcoremusicstudio  ปีที่แล้ว +8

    ☛ Grab your free Mixing Cheatsheet to learn the go-to starting points for EQ and compression in heavy mixes: www.mixcheatsheet.com

    • @gabrielstaniecki
      @gabrielstaniecki ปีที่แล้ว

      Jordan, do you connect your airpods to Mac directly ..or through your interface anyhow?

    • @deanroddey2881
      @deanroddey2881 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think everyone goes through that phase where their stuff isn't sounding good, and they figure it has to be because they don't have the right pre-amp or EQ or whatever. I definitely did. I still pretty much suck, but I at least I know the actual reason why I suck, and I'm working on improving that instead of buying and selling gear (at a loss) that clearly isn't going to fix all my issues, or spending hours editing MIDI or putting five plugins on every track. I have spent a fair amount on outboard gear, but but it's because I don't use plugins anymore and I'm really trying to learn how to to compose, to get it 90% right on the way in, to really learn to hear, and to work in a very old school sort of way. No editing, no tuning, no MIDI, etc...
      I have a pretty good set of 'mains' but I have a mono Mixcube, and it definitely is a huge benefit. Anything that sounds bad in the mid-range that most folks are hearing if they are listening on small speakers or ear buds, will sound 10x bad on those guys. You can overdo it though. Get rid of everything that sounds harsh or nasty on those guys and then listen to it on good speakers and it can sound like audio Aerogel.
      For me, it's ALL about the journey. No one cares if I put out a song tomorrow or next month or next year, or not at all. So there's no point in spending endless hours polishing shite and putting it out, to a woefully small smattering of comments (if you are lucky.) So I spend my time mostly doing small experiments to try to see what I can get with what I've got. I take them far enough to learn the lessons involved, then move on. And I'm making way more progress this way.
      When I'm ready to do a song I'll do a song, and it'll probably will be a lot better for this work. Though of course it'll still be to a woefully small smattering of comments, because no one cares. Nothing is all bad. But nothing is all good either, and the 'democratization of music' has basically created a wall of noise, and has pretty much undermined the value of actual talent. I'd still like to become very talented, but I don't fool myself into thinking that that's going to matter to anyone but myself. So the journey really better be the point.