
SouthSIDE Glen
independentrecording.net
I'll be happy to do that, but I won't be able to get to the new mastered versions until later today or tonight for purely logistical reasons.Can you give specific examples of these points using the eval track and if the mastered versions brought this a little closer to the goals that you would like to hear for the track both artistically and sonically?
Which, for me, may be a good thing because it gives me a chance to first enumerate some of the properties I think can be defined and examined for how well a mix does or does not serve them. Once these are listed (and maybe someone else has some other ideas, this is not necessarily a definitive list), that can serve as an extended mini-Clef (Clef Notes?

- The mix at a minimum supports, and at most helps create, the intended song arrangement rather than constraining or hiding it.
I have heard pro and amateur mixes where the arrangement was almost completely ignored (e. g. a ripping sax solo that remains buried behind the rhythm piano because the levels of neither track were jockeyed when showcase time came), or where an instrument is featured too far in front so that, even though it its following the arrangement, it is wrongly over-emphasized and just does not sound right to be featured at that time.
OTOH, there is a distressingly increasing number of raw tracks crossing either my desk or field of vision that come from rookie bands or recordists where there is no actual arrangement, it's just four guys playin their parts either as if each of them was the lead or with no one ever taking the lead. It's at this point where some structure needs to be put into the mix in order to keep it from just soundling like a wall of mud.
- The mix at minimum supports, and at most helps create the intended mood or emotional thrust of the song.
This is what we've been talking about in the last few posts. I think everybody should get the idea.
I would like to point out, however, that this is not something that I think is always necessary. For example, on Tom's homework assignment MP3, I made the comment that I felt it was a fairly straight up pop mix without a lot of emotion or overt style put into it, but I also didn't think that was ever really needed or intended. But when when it is used effectively, it cam make the difference between a hit record and a forgotten B side.
- The mix at minimum supports, and at most helps create the main hooks in the song.
What are the main hooks of the song? Is it the tone of the wall of guitars? Is it a main riff? is it that stagger in the backbeat? Is it the chord progression? The words of the chorus? The cowbells? The way the vocalist sneers out that one word? The overall rhythm or groove? The killer guest B3? Any combination of these (I dare anybody to count the number of different hooks, both natural and engineer-manufactured, in Fastball's "The Way" or Santana's "Smooth", just for two over-used examples)? And is the mix helping or hurting them?
- The mix provides the proper emphasis to the strongest element(s) of the song, whether they be the lyrics, the vocalist(s), the musicianship or the composition, and that it shifts the focus of this emphasis as necessary throughout the song.
I think this is kinda self-explanatory.
And one more I'd like to add to the list is...
- The mix at minimum supports, and at most creates a purposeful stereo image.
Panning not just for balance and interest, but to create a specific image, either real or abstract. "Real" at one extreme might be something like trying to re-create a real stage-ish experience with the band standing in front of you as if you were running Camera B. "Abstract" at another extreme might be something like what Alan Parsons or Brian Eno excel at where geometries and moving patters of sound in a seemingly 3D space suck the listener inside the music. Or any combination of the two in the middle.
Like with the emotion property, this one is not always necessary. There are some great mixes out there that are simply panned LCR (Left-Center-Right) that make absolutely no stereophonic sense and create no image whatsoever. But when used, this is a property that can be measured and can add that extra dimension to the mix (as well as open up the mix stage for more rrom and more possibilities).
The bottom line is that these are all mix properties that can be quantified and recognized, even if they can bend more to artistic than technical, and that can be enjoyed by any ear but require an analytical and critical ear to study or to (re)create, and can have a large and direct bearing on the overall quality of the mix.
G.