
RhythmRmixd
New member
I think I'm starting to get a normal practice down for how I like to record and mix tracks, and I'm really getting a feel for what works and what doesn't (as I'm sure many of you have long ago). Great, so what, you say.
As of late, I've found that recording my line-in synths at solid, but not over-bearing levels into stereo audio tracks, and then bringing the tracks I want to sit quieter in the mix down on the fader levels (as opposed to bringing the parts I want louder up in volume) has produced the best results. Sort of a subtractive EQ type approach, I suppose, except with volume faders instead. A primary reason for this was to allow additional headroom for dynamics-type processing on the louder tracks (kick, snare, etc.), but I'm finding that the overall sound of the final cd burn is sounding cleaner at higher volumes due to this (or at least I think).
I heard much talk about a mix having "potential" to be louder, and was wondering if maybe this type of mixing is one of the ways to acheive that potential. I've noticed a lot of my recent mixes are hovering in the -14 to
-17 rms range, and I'm wondering if I'm becoming a dynamics freak, because when I push the level up much further than this it really starts to sound like crap to me. This seems like it would be very unlike the normal for the genre of music I'm creating, hip hop and rap style beats.
Anyway, I'm thinking maybe the best way to make up for leftover headroom, the extra headroom I gained from throwing the faders down a little further at the mixing stage, would be at the mastering stage, instead of trying to keep levels higher in the mix beforehand?

As of late, I've found that recording my line-in synths at solid, but not over-bearing levels into stereo audio tracks, and then bringing the tracks I want to sit quieter in the mix down on the fader levels (as opposed to bringing the parts I want louder up in volume) has produced the best results. Sort of a subtractive EQ type approach, I suppose, except with volume faders instead. A primary reason for this was to allow additional headroom for dynamics-type processing on the louder tracks (kick, snare, etc.), but I'm finding that the overall sound of the final cd burn is sounding cleaner at higher volumes due to this (or at least I think).
I heard much talk about a mix having "potential" to be louder, and was wondering if maybe this type of mixing is one of the ways to acheive that potential. I've noticed a lot of my recent mixes are hovering in the -14 to
-17 rms range, and I'm wondering if I'm becoming a dynamics freak, because when I push the level up much further than this it really starts to sound like crap to me. This seems like it would be very unlike the normal for the genre of music I'm creating, hip hop and rap style beats.
Anyway, I'm thinking maybe the best way to make up for leftover headroom, the extra headroom I gained from throwing the faders down a little further at the mixing stage, would be at the mastering stage, instead of trying to keep levels higher in the mix beforehand?