B
bdam123
Member
So long story short, we had a production that needed mixing. We contacted a mixer that we thought was credible enough to get the job done. We ended up not fitting into his schedule so he recommended one of his colleagues. This colleague didn't have as impressive of a track record but the dude we contacted vouched for him.
I sent a rough mix and a PT session with everything basically already leveled. You probably guessed, the mix came back horrible. None of the levels were right, not even close to what our rough mix sounded like. Overall lack of attention to detail was apparent. We haven't paid him yet and we're already thinking about going to another person. In all honestly we could have done a better overall mix ourselves.
Whats the right thing to do here? I really feel bad about not paying someone for their work but if the work doesn't look promising and not even close to what we were looking for (I included a rough mix along with whole page worth of notes detailing what we wanted) am I in the right to tell him the deal and move on?
The last time we had someone mix we literally had one or two changes and it was exactly what we wanted. This guy might had hit 25% of the things we had on the list. It was almost like a joke. There were parts that we so ridiculously wrong that a matter of "taste" was completely out of a question. They were just wrong.
I know a lot of you guys have your own mix services so what do ou guys think?
I sent a rough mix and a PT session with everything basically already leveled. You probably guessed, the mix came back horrible. None of the levels were right, not even close to what our rough mix sounded like. Overall lack of attention to detail was apparent. We haven't paid him yet and we're already thinking about going to another person. In all honestly we could have done a better overall mix ourselves.
Whats the right thing to do here? I really feel bad about not paying someone for their work but if the work doesn't look promising and not even close to what we were looking for (I included a rough mix along with whole page worth of notes detailing what we wanted) am I in the right to tell him the deal and move on?
The last time we had someone mix we literally had one or two changes and it was exactly what we wanted. This guy might had hit 25% of the things we had on the list. It was almost like a joke. There were parts that we so ridiculously wrong that a matter of "taste" was completely out of a question. They were just wrong.
I know a lot of you guys have your own mix services so what do ou guys think?