➡️YOU GOTTA SEE THIS!⬅️ ✅Join the channel to get access all the premium courses: bit.ly/2SNX8bx ✅Bella Kelly's Single/Video Throat: bit.ly/3dxeJOf ✅Book David for Mix & Mastering: bookinghfs@gmail.com ✅Free Plugins & Discounts: bit.ly/2ORlOPL ✅More Mixing Courses: bit.ly/2MxUJ54
2 years later and about 40 shares to friends and producers who mix their own stuff... This is still the best video for making a track SUPER professional and radio ready. I even hear songs on the radio and sound cloud... That need this video applied to them.
CBAN the input of the limiter is pushed further than the output. The difference between input and output will determine the gain in loudness. Plus he saturated the snare on top of that. Saturation, when used this way, adds harmonics to the audio which makes it SEEM „louder“ while the actual loudness drops. It‘s paradox, but that‘s how our ears work. The main gain in loudness is done by the limiter in this case though
I'm super new here (Mixbus TV), but not new to TH-cam production/mixing/mastering channels and yea, that pretty much sums up my sentiment as well, Chris!
I never thought about using saturation to reduce peaks before. So many tutorials on the Web just talk about add saturation to this and that to make it sound better and fail to talk about how it affects the sound and most don't seem to cover using saturation to reduce peaks. Before, I just used compression. But this video gave me a new perspective and a new use for using saturation. And it's a pretty darn big reason....to reduce peaks so you get a mix that is better prepared for mastering. This is just outstanding. Your presentation style is also spot on. No waffle, no bs, just straight to the point and this video just flew by because I was so engaged. Really fascinating. This is gold. Really appreciate your hard work. I would love to see more videos on distortion and saturation because like you said its just so important for a professional sounding mix and it's a broad topic. Thanks again
I think the best way to think about all this stuff is that saturation, compression, limiting and clipping are basically all the same, it just a few parameters that change
Sh** He just changed the way I mix. Quickly saw my flaws staring back at me in the approach of something I readily admit knowing little about. THANK YOU!!!
To answer your question at the end, here i'm interested in each of your videos. They're like pieces of the big Puzzle, that i begin to perceive in its entirety. This one today was, as usual, super clear and enlighting, thank you again El Professor.
This has completely changed the way I look at my mixes. I always knew there was lots of room for improvement, but I never knew where to start looking. Thanks!
I found myself laughing in amusement from how miraculous some of these tips are, especially when you were comparing peak levels. I can't wait to apply all these mixing techniques man, you earned a sub fair and square.
"Mastering" is the process in which prepares musical material for release on whatever commercial platforms the material is aimed to be released on. Period. Everything else is opinion and whatever proprietary philosophy the "mastering engineer" deems is part of that process. So if a track is otherwise sonically pleasing to the engineer and all they need to do is add a few db to the mix to get it to the target loudness level of the release platform, that's what "mastering" is in that context.
Yes but how many great mixing engineers hand you mixes as clean as these... and you wouldn't say this "mix" in particular cant use some extra transformer style bass? Mixing and Mastering in practical reality, after all the psychology and such, are two different things.. few mixing engineers will NAIL this level of clarity and detail, so the work of the mastering engineer calls for FAR MORE than leveling! Mastering Engineers KNOW how to phatten and fill up (or thin out and clean up) your best effort mix, and they will TELL the mixer what needs fixin, or they will ask for stems and fix it themselves. Ideally all mixes are perfect with the bass matched to the genres needs and the Mastering engineer just targets the loudness. But there is alot you can do to sweeten this mix in particular!
the real value in daves videos is found when you revisit them..its like a text book...you need to study them...for me about the third time i listen the info sticks and i recall it when im working..and it isnt hard seeing that dave has maybe the coolest voice in the world...thanx dave your a badass...
During my 5 years of would-be sound engineer for my band, I ignored saturation... Thanks to your video my mix improved! Just in time before releasing our first EP! Thank you @mixbustv
At last !! I've been on this exactly issue for the last 5 years explaining my clients to bring me better mixes , with more controlled dynamics and careful and balanced eq. Mastering shouldn't be a complicated task if engineers know their craft better. Congratulation !!!
These are things I always did in my mixes because "I have been told to"... you actually put all the pieces together (parallel comp, saturation, crest factor, peak values) explaining "why" would you want to use those and what to aim for. You cleared out a lot of fog for me today. Thanks so much
When you spoke about saturation to help tame peaks and frequencies. Then you said the word density. . . you hit the number one thing I tell people and the #1 thing I use to suffer from. You're possibly the only person I've heard to actually comment on a sounds density.
This one is gold. Was struggling to improve crest factor with compression and EQ... And it's mainly saturation... Thanks for sharing your knowledge & tricks!
I'm so glad I went and looked up your past videos. I have absolutely STRUGGLED with getting a mix with loudness potential. It wasn't until you described the role of saturation the way you did that I figured out how to resolve my kick and sub without losing the drive of it. Crazy you can hear something a million times but doesn't click until someone explains it a certain way. Thank you!
I watched this video for the first time years ago and its still one of the best ones out there. I love coming back to great content to keep myself grounding in the truth with so much misinformation out there. Sometime we can get away from the fundamentals and videos like this remind me to apply new info and technique to the fundamental, not replace the fundamentals with them.
Wow!!! I’ve been looking at mixing and mastering TH-cam vids for several years and none of them shared this info. This is the best vid I have ever seen on youtube!!!!!!!
Late to the party here, but this info is pure gold. My mixes went from -14 dbfs RMS, while triggering the ISP limiter to keep the peaks at -2 dbfs, to -12dbfs RMS with -5 dbfs peaks and the limiter not touching it. This was using saturation in the channels and on the master bus. Huge improvement. Thanks for your channel and all the great info you share!
there is this trend in mixing now to control all the dynamics within an inch of their life and then try to bring them back with automation... I guess there's some irony there. There are some interesting things about the nature of saturation here for sure, but there's something really depressing about being excited by what your waveform looks like.
Peter Bond i know i dont get it either. Your ears are more important then yours eyes. I never look at the audio waves just listen and watch my rms lvl the max id go is -6 to -8 some say this is loud for a master but i do make paytrance so that -6 is bassline and the rest sit around -8 to -10 who cares what the audio looks like aslong as you have not dubsteped to -4 rms ur good hahaha
Before I saw this video, the very thought of using something resembling distortion when mixing terrified me, because I always associated distortion with degradation. But my mixes had huge crest factors and I could never get them to be loud, no matter what I tried. This video was a major eye-opener for me, and easily one of my favorites on this subject. It introduced me to a whole new way of looking at mixing, and for that, I'm endlessly thankful!
I saw your video in my suggestions list and in 30 minutes you managed to clarify something I never understood in 17 years. Thanks for covering this topic. This will save me soooooo much time and effort. You are a legend!
@@redkay7969 that Blackbox is the best as you can saturate without distorting. I use the minimal cheap one I got for around 20bux and its already enough for a nice full mix!
This. Dude. Has changed my life. I have been searching for this for two weeks. My snare was eating up all my head room. I found out logic has a tape delay. That when used correctly, can have a saturation effect. I found 4-5 db of headroom. Thank you!!!!!!!
I use a free plugin called s(M)exoscope to see visually how much to saturate. Really usefull especially when using vst's and not seeing the rendered waveform like on recorded ones. It basically shows you a real time waveform of anything you play through it.
I think I have learned more from this channel, than I have done from all the other thousands of videos combined that I have watched about mixing & producing. MixbusTV is the shit and I thank you very much David for putting all this out for everyone to watch! Cheers from Sweden!
This is got to be the best tutorial on loud mixing. I watch it over two years ago. I've come back a few times I remember how much sense it made. I have yet to put saturation on anything. I've continued to have off balance mixes which give me a headache to get half way decent. Then the CRUST factor comes back to mind. I need the f***ing CRUST factor.
This makes a lot of sense. If you're trying to increase the loudness of a master, you're going to be flattening your dynamics when bringing the limiter's threshold down - bringing up quiet material and bringing down loud transients. By initially starting out with a less dynamic and "flatter" mix, it'll be easier to bring the whole track to a louder listening level than trying to "flatten" an already very dynamic mix. I can see how this could get out of hand for this reason and you could kill the entire feel of a song through killing it's dynamics, but wow this is really clicking with me. Thank you!
Good tutorial, sensible explanation on how to use the aural exciter, and how to add density by adding low level distortion to the vocal (sounded good) ... the original mix/waveform has the drums already compressed as I hear it. The drums are the most processed of all instruments, doesn't need to be! The final red waveform.. I see you gave it a haircut, this step left out of the tutorial. All that you explained should have produced a very audible improvement IMO, but the final result is major loud and oppressive. The original sounds better turned up loud.. lights up the room when turned up. Generally it's not necessary to use to much sugar in the recipe. it kills the flavor. It's not necessary to over-process (kill) the tone of a guitar, a drum kit, etc., in the effort to make things sound larger. Loudness is also accomplished by the listener. it's called a volume control!
Geez man, this was so informative and well presented. At the end of the segment I was looking for the payment method! This level of instruction deserves payment!
Thank you for the Video! Very helpfull, we really live in blessed times where guys like you share their knowledge via youtube. Greetings from Dv Hvnd and yes i would like to see the mastering process too!
just watched a couple of your videos and wow. You explain things that I haven't seen others explain before. I'm definitely subscribed. thanks for all the help. its people like you that help the ones who are self-taught or internet taught the most. the amount of details that you incorporate into your videos is very eye opening. thanks again.
Thanks so much for all your videos, really helping me understand mixing better while I work on my first mixtape (will be the "Made From My Bed Mixtape" because I'm making it in my makeshift bed-studio while I'm fighting and slowly recovering from chronic Lyme disease and many other mental and physical illnesses-I'm making it both for me, for catharsis and healing, and also to hopefully reach others who may be in the midst of chronic illness and are looking for some empathy, someone who "gets it," or who just need hope and to now they're not alone). Thanks for taking your time to upload quality content vids to help people like me who have no choice BUT to record from home and do a lot of this on my own.💯👍🏻 Subbed, no brainer!
Awesome video . Awesome song. The two things I will take away from this video is the way you achieved density in such a clever way and your emphasis on balance. This will change my life. Thank you!!
Really amazing!, great info about loundness without increasing dbs. I usually does something similiar with saturators, but the idea of limiting the peaks, and difference between average level and peaks make a lot of sense. Thank you for this incredible video!
This is the video I come back to a few times a year to solidify the stuff I've learned since the last time I watched it. So much insight here it's insane. Thank you.
It took me a while to understand but I think I get it now. Thank you! Can you do us a favor and redo this video for hip-hop mixes? I’m going to test it out myself but I’m curious to see if the same rules apply and I’m sure others are also.
I already knew those techniques somehow, but it certainly is more memorable when a nice guy with a strange accent is showing you how he used it in a mix. Thanks, mate!
As regard to the loudness war still going on...Yes no argument there. Replay Gain , standard volume levels for satellite radio, and of course compression on AM/FM radio makes the whole loud mix deal seem stupid and waste of time. I'm sure you realize sir that with Replay Gain for I tunes an old 80's cd will sound better than some modern compressed mix. Why? Replay Gain will play them at equal level. And it will bring the modern hyper-compressed mix down in volume. In the old days Mastering engineers were supposed to make the tape sound good on vinyl. Times change but the loudness war no longer makes sense.
And what about ethical implications? If you are producing and mastering music one would expect that you at least like music, so why destroy it? Because it's your job?
I finally get why those little soft clip knobs are there for!!! Thanks so much for making these tutorials; they are among the best of the best mixing tutorials!
Very Good explained specially at that part Lofi saturation and limiting , Sounds louder and yet gains 4 dbs of Headroom Thanks and can you suggest me some good saturation plugins for drums and synths I wanna have choices rather than using same plugin for all
I just go of ear and also when you use limiter you have to know why your using it and whats the result you want. Dont just apply anything without knowing the sound your looking for. Limiters are very powerful
Loudness wars should be over since LUFS and other leveling systems have become the standard. You make your mix loud and undynamic, you'll be turned down equally and you gain nothing.
How I see it: The more I learn the more I understand that I don't really know that mush. And that is the reason I always look and read about mixing and mastering, there is always something I don't know. Have a skilful time and always try to learn more. Pinge
INSANASOMNIA Yeah Ian is great as well. I like David too, just started watching these videos by the way... Ian and David supplement each other. Worth checking both out.
Disclaimer: My comment wasn't a bash on this channel, it was just a suggestion for supplemental material on this very large topic that is Mastering. Cheers.
Jon C I agree sir. This video is great advice but they are a lot of mastering engineers who will say "mix normally..Leave loudness to us." Yes, it's a very large topic. Not criticizing the video. The video on "High Pass Madness" brought a smile on my face.
Jon C yeah ive learnt many technuques by many guys so im just collecting info take some leave some and make up my own mind. Also check out produce like a pro! i learn alot by watching interviews and studio tours and how they use there hardware. So grab a cuppa put ur feet up and watch Warren go on tangents hahaha
Omgoodness mouth dropped to the floor on the snare track how you created more volume fatness and density with out raising the over all level actually reduced level to create that monster snare😳👂. Hats off sir u are my teacher. Never seen it like this before makes so much sense and you made it clearer how to use plugins 👍🏾👍🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾✊🏾✊🏾
Best mixing channel on TH-cam. Keep it up! After 2 years of learning production of the Internet, it's the first time I've heard of Crest Factor, that says a lot about the quality of your explanations.
I am house producer and I am not int rock/metal genre but having a decent taste on music I have to say that this song is pretty awesome! Nice tutorial as well!!
Amazingly informative video. Just wanted to add a couple of tid bits in here. First, a small tip for aligning anything quickly in Pro Tools that took me 10 years to figure out... Create a marker where you want to move to, then in the grid section, next to the transport, select Clips/Markers and your selection will snap to the marker and not the grid. Next, a list of great saturation plugins that weren't mentioned in this video... Vertigo VSM-3 Klanghelm - SDRR Kush Audio - Omega A, Omega N (use the 20db pad for more subtleness) SKnote - Disto (Hottitude and Warmth sections) Aqustica - Navy, Sand (and most of their others) Slate Digital - VCC Great tip with the Alpha Compressor, never done that before. I had always avoided the clipper when doing mastering compression because of the distortion, but very useful feature now that I know how to use it.
MixbusTV Huge thanks for this great informative tutorial! I've also found myself using Alpha again and again because of its capability of giving so much more headroom. Meanwhile, I don't use it just for clipping though. I've found it giving some amazingly smooth groovy sound with its sidechain gain being turned down to about -2.5db and sc frequency being tuned to the kick drum frequency of the song. This works especially when I need to deal with plenty of subbass content. I use it like this in the unlinked LR mode. Waves REDD also works really well with any kind of low frequency stuff.
Wow, im in the middle of mixing session, and everything like hell. When we break time, i find this video, and try some tips from here. And the result, my client smile. Thank you
➡️YOU GOTTA SEE THIS!⬅️
✅Join the channel to get access all the premium courses:
bit.ly/2SNX8bx
✅Bella Kelly's Single/Video Throat: bit.ly/3dxeJOf
✅Book David for Mix & Mastering: bookinghfs@gmail.com
✅Free Plugins & Discounts: bit.ly/2ORlOPL
✅More Mixing Courses: bit.ly/2MxUJ54
"as you can see, this waveform looks thick as shit" the best line
Its one of the many reasons MixBusTV is the number 1 channel in the world in this field of expertise lol
that cracked me tf up!! instant sub hahaha
agreed X-D
I listened to that line over and over , Laughing for like 10 min. straight 😂😂🤣🤣🤣
Literally "a pain in the *ss".
2 years later and about 40 shares to friends and producers who mix their own stuff... This is still the best video for making a track SUPER professional and radio ready. I even hear songs on the radio and sound cloud... That need this video applied to them.
study the mix no time to waste
This is nothing but 30 minutes of fucking gold. You just opened my eyes to so much thank you man
nice to see you here flown lolol
Yes indeed!
Couldn't believe my eyes when it went from -4 to -8 and it actually sounded louder 🤯🤯🤯
That was amazing for me too!!
Im assuming cuz he took out some dynamics that the -4 wasnt getting overly compressed but at -8 it is?? Idk that part tripped me up
The output of the limiter is set to -8 which dictates its max level
@@Thesakeable but why did dropping the ceiling another -4db make it sound louder? Signal processing?
CBAN the input of the limiter is pushed further than the output. The difference between input and output will determine the gain in loudness. Plus he saturated the snare on top of that. Saturation, when used this way, adds harmonics to the audio which makes it SEEM „louder“ while the actual loudness drops. It‘s paradox, but that‘s how our ears work. The main gain in loudness is done by the limiter in this case though
THE Best fucking music production/mixing/mastering channel on the entire TH-cam community. Hats off to you mate
100% agree
I'm super new here (Mixbus TV), but not new to TH-cam production/mixing/mastering channels and yea, that pretty much sums up my sentiment as well, Chris!
Yep 👍
Yes!
Totally agree with that
There is no doubt, this is one of the best youtube channels for mixing and for producing. Thanks a lot.
***** Thanks you for this videos and tutorials. Regards.
agreed
Elkin Marenco i totally agree!! Hope to achieve that quality someday!
F yea. This guy is on the level and produces no bs. His mixes make shitty music listenable. That amazes me
Hope to achieve that quality someday too! Your channel also attracts nice people! You did it! Well Done!
I never thought about using saturation to reduce peaks before. So many tutorials on the Web just talk about add saturation to this and that to make it sound better and fail to talk about how it affects the sound and most don't seem to cover using saturation to reduce peaks. Before, I just used compression. But this video gave me a new perspective and a new use for using saturation. And it's a pretty darn big reason....to reduce peaks so you get a mix that is better prepared for mastering. This is just outstanding. Your presentation style is also spot on. No waffle, no bs, just straight to the point and this video just flew by because I was so engaged. Really fascinating. This is gold. Really appreciate your hard work. I would love to see more videos on distortion and saturation because like you said its just so important for a professional sounding mix and it's a broad topic. Thanks again
yep. Got a new subscriber in me =)
I had the same revelation. Always used compression for this
How does a video that has lots of "waffle" in it sounds like 🤣
I think the best way to think about all this stuff is that saturation, compression, limiting and clipping are basically all the same, it just a few parameters that change
Sh** He just changed the way I mix. Quickly saw my flaws staring back at me in the approach of something I readily admit knowing little about. THANK YOU!!!
Man, never thought of this crest factor thing. Everytime I watch your videos I kick myself for all the things I didn't do on past mixes, haha.
Sup there david! Love your song covers.
It felt like I was watching pirated content because it's too good to be free
For The Last Time Lmaoo its funny cause i thought the same amazing content
Exactly 😢😢😢
@@PSALTER_STUDIOS Nigga it's been 4 years
To answer your question at the end, here i'm interested in each of your videos. They're like pieces of the big Puzzle, that i begin to perceive in its entirety.
This one today was, as usual, super clear and enlighting, thank you again El Professor.
This has completely changed the way I look at my mixes. I always knew there was lots of room for improvement, but I never knew where to start looking. Thanks!
Elysia is my favorite compressor. Magic on the stereo image, magic on the soft clip, magic across the board. It's magic. Magic.
MixbusTV I want a mackie mixer with their 500 series Mpressor its quite alot thou 😔
Straight to the point. You have very good tips and you're not narrow-minded as most producers. As a producer - I APPROVE!
MixbusTV Honest words! Keep up the good work :-)
I found myself laughing in amusement from how miraculous some of these tips are, especially when you were comparing peak levels. I can't wait to apply all these mixing techniques man, you earned a sub fair and square.
finally not a video about how to create "the secret formula master chain" in ableton. Thanks for opening my eyes.
Gosh I remember watching this video for the first time. Absolutely changed my life😂 Thank you David
"Mastering" is the process in which prepares musical material for release on whatever commercial platforms the material is aimed to be released on. Period. Everything else is opinion and whatever proprietary philosophy the "mastering engineer" deems is part of that process. So if a track is otherwise sonically pleasing to the engineer and all they need to do is add a few db to the mix to get it to the target loudness level of the release platform, that's what "mastering" is in that context.
Yes but how many great mixing engineers hand you mixes as clean as these... and you wouldn't say this "mix" in particular cant use some extra transformer style bass? Mixing and Mastering in practical reality, after all the psychology and such, are two different things.. few mixing engineers will NAIL this level of clarity and detail, so the work of the mastering engineer calls for FAR MORE than leveling! Mastering Engineers KNOW how to phatten and fill up (or thin out and clean up) your best effort mix, and they will TELL the mixer what needs fixin, or they will ask for stems and fix it themselves. Ideally all mixes are perfect with the bass matched to the genres needs and the Mastering engineer just targets the loudness. But there is alot you can do to sweeten this mix in particular!
Wow! This site is THE place to go to learn all the things others don't tell you. Thanks, yet again! Really appreciate it.
Gold tutorial, thank you so much.
You are the tutorial master I've been looking for. So articulate, exactly what I need to hear.
the real value in daves videos is found when you revisit them..its like a text book...you need to study them...for me about the third time i listen the info sticks and i recall it when im working..and it isnt hard seeing that dave has maybe the coolest voice in the world...thanx dave your a badass...
During my 5 years of would-be sound engineer for my band, I ignored saturation... Thanks to your video my mix improved! Just in time before releasing our first EP! Thank you @mixbustv
At last !! I've been on this exactly issue for the last 5 years explaining my clients to bring me better mixes , with more controlled dynamics and careful and balanced eq. Mastering shouldn't be a complicated task if engineers know their craft better. Congratulation !!!
Well said, this mix lets you get a great master whatever level the client requests
These are things I always did in my mixes because "I have been told to"... you actually put all the pieces together (parallel comp, saturation, crest factor, peak values) explaining "why" would you want to use those and what to aim for. You cleared out a lot of fog for me today. Thanks so much
When you spoke about saturation to help tame peaks and frequencies. Then you said the word density. . . you hit the number one thing I tell people and the #1 thing I use to suffer from. You're possibly the only person I've heard to actually comment on a sounds density.
This is quality content - a real lesson that we should be paying for, not just "8 tips" or whatever.
This one is gold. Was struggling to improve crest factor with compression and EQ... And it's mainly saturation... Thanks for sharing your knowledge & tricks!
I'm so glad I went and looked up your past videos. I have absolutely STRUGGLED with getting a mix with loudness potential. It wasn't until you described the role of saturation the way you did that I figured out how to resolve my kick and sub without losing the drive of it.
Crazy you can hear something a million times but doesn't click until someone explains it a certain way. Thank you!
Literally rewatching this video at least once a year
Awesome info that nobody else could ever explain this clearly, thank you!
I watched this video for the first time years ago and its still one of the best ones out there. I love coming back to great content to keep myself grounding in the truth with so much misinformation out there. Sometime we can get away from the fundamentals and videos like this remind me to apply new info and technique to the fundamental, not replace the fundamentals with them.
i stuck around for the accent and ended up getting some solid keys in this production life, thanks man!
Wow!!! I’ve been looking at mixing and mastering TH-cam vids for several years and none of them shared this info. This is the best vid I have ever seen on youtube!!!!!!!
Just tried using more saturation, that and some eq side chaining made huge difference. I don't do rock or EDM but the principle still applies. Thanks.
Late to the party here, but this info is pure gold. My mixes went from -14 dbfs RMS, while triggering the ISP limiter to keep the peaks at -2 dbfs, to -12dbfs RMS with -5 dbfs peaks and the limiter not touching it. This was using saturation in the channels and on the master bus. Huge improvement. Thanks for your channel and all the great info you share!
This changed my entire view of mixing! Also made quiet a few techniques make more sense
This changes everything! Been smiling through this whole video excited to put this all to use!!!
haha, "as you can see this waveform looks thck as shit" ! ha
true
Reverend Eslam Sure...Dynamics are one of the most important factors in life. Not just music.
there is this trend in mixing now to control all the dynamics within an inch of their life and then try to bring them back with automation... I guess there's some irony there. There are some interesting things about the nature of saturation here for sure, but there's something really depressing about being excited by what your waveform looks like.
i like dynamics 😁 i think as long as ur kick punches strong you can get away with not playing the loudness war.
Peter Bond i know i dont get it either. Your ears are more important then yours eyes. I never look at the audio waves just listen and watch my rms lvl the max id go is -6 to -8 some say this is loud for a master but i do make paytrance so that -6 is bassline and the rest sit around -8 to -10 who cares what the audio looks like aslong as you have not dubsteped to -4 rms ur good hahaha
Before I saw this video, the very thought of using something resembling distortion when mixing terrified me, because I always associated distortion with degradation. But my mixes had huge crest factors and I could never get them to be loud, no matter what I tried. This video was a major eye-opener for me, and easily one of my favorites on this subject. It introduced me to a whole new way of looking at mixing, and for that, I'm endlessly thankful!
one of the best youtube channels for mixing and for producing ! GREAT !
I saw your video in my suggestions list and in 30 minutes you managed to clarify something I never understood in 17 years. Thanks for covering this topic. This will save me soooooo much time and effort. You are a legend!
Genius stuff dude. Saturation is the way to go. Decapitator and j37 are my fave (so far). I'm consistently struggling with eq and balance myself.
you need to try blackbox
@@redkay7969 that Blackbox is the best as you can saturate without distorting. I use the minimal cheap one I got for around 20bux and its already enough for a nice full mix!
This. Dude. Has changed my life. I have been searching for this for two weeks. My snare was eating up all my head room. I found out logic has a tape delay. That when used correctly, can have a saturation effect. I found 4-5 db of headroom. Thank you!!!!!!!
So true! You drop so much knowledge! Thanks!
YEEEES, finally, a good mixing tutorial that explains not only what to do, but when and why. This is really helped me in mixing decisions.
I use a free plugin called s(M)exoscope to see visually how much to saturate. Really usefull especially when using vst's and not seeing the rendered waveform like on recorded ones. It basically shows you a real time waveform of anything you play through it.
Thanks for the tip I'll check it out
Yes, that's a great plugin! I use it too :)
I think I have learned more from this channel, than I have done from all the other thousands of videos combined that I have watched about mixing & producing. MixbusTV is the shit and I thank you very much David for putting all this out for everyone to watch! Cheers from Sweden!
This is got to be the best tutorial on loud mixing. I watch it over two years ago. I've come back a few times I remember how much sense it made. I have yet to put saturation on anything. I've continued to have off balance mixes which give me a headache to get half way decent. Then the CRUST factor comes back to mind. I need the f***ing CRUST factor.
Crust factor is pizza mate haha, you mean crest.
@@mk-1901😂😂😂😂😂😂
Its about time someone explains this in easy to understand words.
(edit: its 2020 and I just came across this. Wish I found this years ago.)
Yes - I'd really love to see the mastering session
nice video by the way, keep going like that!:)
Ill never forget how this video forever changed my music
This makes a lot of sense. If you're trying to increase the loudness of a master, you're going to be flattening your dynamics when bringing the limiter's threshold down - bringing up quiet material and bringing down loud transients. By initially starting out with a less dynamic and "flatter" mix, it'll be easier to bring the whole track to a louder listening level than trying to "flatten" an already very dynamic mix. I can see how this could get out of hand for this reason and you could kill the entire feel of a song through killing it's dynamics, but wow this is really clicking with me. Thank you!
this video has blown my mind, i now understand so much more. Cant wait to put it to practice later
Good tutorial, sensible explanation on how to use the aural exciter, and how to add density by adding low level distortion to the vocal (sounded good) ... the original mix/waveform has the drums already compressed as I hear it. The drums are the most processed of all instruments, doesn't need to be! The final red waveform.. I see you gave it a haircut, this step left out of the tutorial. All that you explained should have produced a very audible improvement IMO, but the final result is major loud and oppressive. The original sounds better turned up loud.. lights up the room when turned up. Generally it's not necessary to use to much sugar in the recipe. it kills the flavor. It's not necessary to over-process (kill) the tone of a guitar, a drum kit, etc., in the effort to make things sound larger. Loudness is also accomplished by the listener. it's called a volume control!
Dude!! I learned more in this one video than the last 500 TH-cam videos I’ve watched in the last couple weeks! Love your channel!
Another great video filled with useful information... thanks David.
Such a cool voice.
This video confirms that I need to balance the mix better. I always go too loud.
Geez man, this was so informative and well presented. At the end of the segment I was looking for the payment method! This level of instruction deserves payment!
Best explantion of this concept Ive ever heard! We need more people explaining things like you do!
Thank you for the Video! Very helpfull, we really live in blessed times where guys like you share their knowledge via youtube. Greetings from Dv Hvnd and yes i would like to see the mastering process too!
just watched a couple of your videos and wow. You explain things that I haven't seen others explain before. I'm definitely subscribed. thanks for all the help. its people like you that help the ones who are self-taught or internet taught the most. the amount of details that you incorporate into your videos is very eye opening. thanks again.
Thanks so much for all your videos, really helping me understand mixing better while I work on my first mixtape (will be the "Made From My Bed Mixtape" because I'm making it in my makeshift bed-studio while I'm fighting and slowly recovering from chronic Lyme disease and many other mental and physical illnesses-I'm making it both for me, for catharsis and healing, and also to hopefully reach others who may be in the midst of chronic illness and are looking for some empathy, someone who "gets it," or who just need hope and to now they're not alone). Thanks for taking your time to upload quality content vids to help people like me who have no choice BUT to record from home and do a lot of this on my own.💯👍🏻 Subbed, no brainer!
Awesome video . Awesome song. The two things I will take away from this video is the way you achieved density in such a clever way and your emphasis on balance. This will change my life. Thank you!!
Really amazing!, great info about loundness without increasing dbs. I usually does something similiar with saturators, but the idea of limiting the peaks, and difference between average level and peaks make a lot of sense. Thank you for this incredible video!
This is the video I come back to a few times a year to solidify the stuff I've learned since the last time I watched it. So much insight here it's insane. Thank you.
It took me a while to understand but I think I get it now. Thank you! Can you do us a favor and redo this video for hip-hop mixes? I’m going to test it out myself but I’m curious to see if the same rules apply and I’m sure others are also.
Just watched this video and without even implementing it I already understand why my mixing just improved. Great job!!
Lol, what you said about the limiter in the beginning is so true. Saw it in a tutorial, tried it and it sounded like shit so here I am haha
I already knew those techniques somehow, but it certainly is more memorable when a nice guy with a strange accent is showing you how he used it in a mix. Thanks, mate!
As regard to the loudness war still going on...Yes no argument there. Replay Gain , standard volume levels for satellite radio, and of course compression on AM/FM radio makes the whole loud mix deal seem stupid and waste of time. I'm sure you realize sir that with Replay Gain for I tunes an old 80's cd will sound better than some modern compressed mix. Why? Replay Gain will play them at equal level. And it will bring the modern hyper-compressed mix down in volume. In the old days Mastering engineers were supposed to make the tape sound good on vinyl. Times change but the loudness war no longer makes sense.
And what about ethical implications? If you are producing and mastering music one would expect that you at least like music, so why destroy it? Because it's your job?
I finally get why those little soft clip knobs are there for!!! Thanks so much for making these tutorials; they are among the best of the best mixing tutorials!
5:06 when you see bae in yoga pants
LOL. Fucking gold, good one. Seriously though, great video!
I agree
I was trying this on a mix as I watching this, and there's a night and day difference in my mix! wow! thanks so much, man!
Very Good explained specially at that part Lofi saturation and limiting , Sounds louder and yet gains 4 dbs of Headroom
Thanks and can you suggest me some good saturation plugins for drums and synths
I wanna have choices rather than using same plugin for all
Thanks always
Get to the chopppaaaa!
I wasted sooo much time not knowing this myself. I just recenetly discovered this on my own.
When you saturate and limit, how do you determine the threshold and the peak limit value on the limiter?
I just go of ear and also when you use limiter you have to know why your using it and whats the result you want. Dont just apply anything without knowing the sound your looking for. Limiters are very powerful
By lowering the ceiling until there starts to be a little gain reduction
This video is the one that made my mixes FUKING HUUUGE. MASSIVE, BOLD! Many thanks and blessings David.
Loudness wars should be over since LUFS and other leveling systems have become the standard. You make your mix loud and undynamic, you'll be turned down equally and you gain nothing.
@@mixbustv He's right. Your sound is a just a big noise. Do you realize it ??
Extremely well done and YES we want to see the final mastering tips! Finally someone who can explain what they are doing!
Have you checked out Ian Sheppard's podcast "The Mastering Show"? It's really insightful.
How I see it: The more I learn the more I understand that I don't really know that mush. And that is the reason I always look and read about mixing and mastering, there is always something I don't know. Have a skilful time and always try to learn more. Pinge
INSANASOMNIA Yeah Ian is great as well. I like David too, just started watching these videos by the way... Ian and David supplement each other. Worth checking both out.
Disclaimer: My comment wasn't a bash on this channel, it was just a suggestion for supplemental material on this very large topic that is Mastering. Cheers.
Jon C I agree sir. This video is great advice but they are a lot of mastering engineers who will say "mix normally..Leave loudness to us." Yes, it's a very large topic. Not criticizing the video. The video on "High Pass Madness" brought a smile on my face.
Jon C yeah ive learnt many technuques by many guys so im just collecting info take some leave some and make up my own mind. Also check out produce like a pro! i learn alot by watching interviews and studio tours and how they use there hardware. So grab a cuppa put ur feet up and watch Warren go on tangents hahaha
Omgoodness mouth dropped to the floor on the snare track how you created more volume fatness and density with out raising the over all level actually reduced level to create that monster snare😳👂. Hats off sir u are my teacher. Never seen it like this before makes so much sense and you made it clearer how to use plugins 👍🏾👍🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾✊🏾✊🏾
Good tutorial. But I hate loud mixes.
why? loud mixes are loud
Now i understand that my misstakes is not in mastering but in mix :) THX
This is what I would imagine Dracula would sound like if he did a mix tutorial. 🦷
Best mixing channel on TH-cam. Keep it up! After 2 years of learning production of the Internet, it's the first time I've heard of Crest Factor, that says a lot about the quality of your explanations.
Your tips are beyond good, thanks alot!
But that song sounds like a shitty Breaking Benjamin rip off
Wish I had discovered this channel sooner. To the point. Clear and legit
Things are finally starting to make sense and come together. Without you and Streaky i'd still be lost. Thank you!
One of the most concise tutorials I've ever watched, thank you!
Love this video. Way to go, David! You know what you are talking about. I wish many mixing engineers had your brain! ☺
I am house producer and I am not int rock/metal genre but having a decent taste on music I have to say that this song is pretty awesome! Nice tutorial as well!!
Thanks for sharing your knowledge so freely. I've learned a great deal from your doubtless years of hard work and experience.
I had a serious lightbulb moment when watching this video. A switch has been flicked. Thank you so much.
Still one of the best videos on youtube for audio engineers
Amazingly informative video. Just wanted to add a couple of tid bits in here.
First, a small tip for aligning anything quickly in Pro Tools that took me 10 years to figure out... Create a marker where you want to move to, then in the grid section, next to the transport, select Clips/Markers and your selection will snap to the marker and not the grid.
Next, a list of great saturation plugins that weren't mentioned in this video...
Vertigo VSM-3
Klanghelm - SDRR
Kush Audio - Omega A, Omega N (use the 20db pad for more subtleness)
SKnote - Disto (Hottitude and Warmth sections)
Aqustica - Navy, Sand (and most of their others)
Slate Digital - VCC
Great tip with the Alpha Compressor, never done that before. I had always avoided the clipper when doing mastering compression because of the distortion, but very useful feature now that I know how to use it.
MixbusTV Huge thanks for this great informative tutorial! I've also found myself using Alpha again and again because of its capability of giving so much more headroom. Meanwhile, I don't use it just for clipping though. I've found it giving some amazingly smooth groovy sound with its sidechain gain being turned down to about -2.5db and sc frequency being tuned to the kick drum frequency of the song. This works especially when I need to deal with plenty of subbass content. I use it like this in the unlinked LR mode. Waves REDD also works really well with any kind of low frequency stuff.
Wow, im in the middle of mixing session, and everything like hell. When we break time, i find this video, and try some tips from here. And the result, my client smile. Thank you
This tutorial changed my life! Thank you so much!!
My mixes are already a lot better after watching only a few of your videos. Thank you!