F
fendorst
New member
I understand that cranking up a different EQ setting on every individual track in a mix can lead to phase issues, smearing etc.
Do you still get phase problems/smearing if you print each EQ'd track to a new track and then mix the new tracks?
After printing EQ to each track you'd be mixing a bunch of tracks to which you would not add any EQ. Since you're mixing tracks without adding any EQ, are the phase problems avoided?
I'm not recommending the above. I already know the best answer is "If you have to add significant EQ to every track you're doing something wrong during tracking."
It's just a philosophical or technical question. If you print EQ to each individual track and then mix the new tracks without adding any more EQ, do phase problems and smearing go away?
Discuss.
Do you still get phase problems/smearing if you print each EQ'd track to a new track and then mix the new tracks?
After printing EQ to each track you'd be mixing a bunch of tracks to which you would not add any EQ. Since you're mixing tracks without adding any EQ, are the phase problems avoided?
I'm not recommending the above. I already know the best answer is "If you have to add significant EQ to every track you're doing something wrong during tracking."
It's just a philosophical or technical question. If you print EQ to each individual track and then mix the new tracks without adding any more EQ, do phase problems and smearing go away?
Discuss.