
SouthSIDE Glen
independentrecording.net
Most of what I've done has been mixing for others. Sometimes I did the tracking, sometimes not. In many cases - for my situation, anyway - talking to the artists doesn't yield a lot of help. If they haven't gone through the steps of sweating out much of an actual arrangement and really don;t have the ear for producing or mixing themselves, they often don't have much of an answer beyond "just make it sound good", or "do your best", or something like that. You still gotta ask them first, of course, but you gotta be ready to make some decisions on your own.I don't know If your mixing for someone else and have never heard the piece before then your going to run it through faders up to get an impression of the thing and then talk to the artist(s) about what their vision is and build a plan to achieve it.
I remember one of my early jobs where I had to record three acoustic guitars and an acoustic bass as instrumental tracks before over-dubbing some vocals and harmonica on a second pass. There really wasn't much in the way of an arrangement between the acoustics, they were all just playing the basic progressions in teh same key in their own styles, except for one who was the better of the three players who lead with more embellishment than the others.
Anyway, the trick to making that mix work was to listen to each guitar track and decide where the timbre of of each acoustic guitar (and player style) tended. One had a deeper, more resonant body sound, another tended to sound a bit more plucky, and so on. Adjusting the EQ on each guitar just a bit to emphasize the positive parts of the timbre of each track helped both to separate them and sound less like a muddy mess of an arrangement, made the overall mix sound fuller (even if it really wasn't), and made it easier for later automation to emphasize the more interesting parts of each track in it's turn. No changes to the arrangement, no real need to heed the arrangement much in that case - other than giving the lead guitar player some mix priority, of course - just a matter of giving each guitar track a little emphasis of it's own natural personality.
It's not so much a natter of choosing frequency range x for this one and frequency range y for that one or choosing specific frequencies from a Chinese menu; there was still a shitload of overlap between the three guitars, but by adjusting the EQ slightly to emphasize general areas of their natural timbre (and sometimes equally cutting on the other tracks in classic differential EQ style), it can certainly help clean up an otherwise gumbo soup of a mix. But no recipes, you still gotta use your ears.
G.