SouthSIDE Glen
independentrecording.net
I have a bad habit of making mixing a nightmare by having a 10 times too dense arrangement... Knowing that "less is more" and having the backbone to actually follow that rule seems to be two different things.![]()
Ain't that the truth. Don't feel bad, Joza, you have just described an affliction that probably 95% of us have when we start out (including me.)
That explains what I was hearing. I thought there was something not quite right about the way the vocals "chorused" when laid on each other. At times I almost thought it was a phasing issue, but I couldn't put my finger on it. This was part of the reason I was thinking maybe to separate the vocals. But heavy autotuning of the backup vocal could be what I was hearing.My thinking here was this...I had to make a comp track from all the choruses and copy it, use a lot of time correction (and I dont really know the tricks how to do that well) and use midi controlled pitch correction with very fast attack, so if you listen to it in solo it is quite "distorted".
Use your judgment there. If the background vocal is not of steady enough quality to stand on it's own or to get increased gain, then certainly don't do that.
And I have no problem with the off-center lead vocal. As many here can tell you (hello, miro?
), I am not one of those that feels that lead vocals should always or automatically be thrown down the center. And now that you bring it up, one option with your mix might be to actually pull the dry piano a little more towards the center, maybe only a 50% pan to the right (more or less), and then push the stacked vocals just a little more to the left - not too much, maybe just a few degrees, so you get little more of a L/R balance between the vocals and piano. The exception being that neat little vocal break with the reverb at 2:20; which I'd throw right down the middle like a high, hard fast ball in baseball
. Once again, just an idea to try, if you have enough time. No promises that it will actually be better.That reminds me, starting at right around 2:07 or so up to that vocal break at 2:20, there's a nice tapping at the ride cymbal. This picks up again after the break at about 2:26 through the rest of the song. If you can isolate that in your tracking and pull that up a bit (via either gain or EQ) as an added accent from 2:07 on through the end (excluding the vocal break), I think that might sound pretty nice.
G.