djclueveli said:
i'm having problems with the piano guitar and vocals. i left the vocals in the middle the piano on the left and the guitar on the right. but it seems like theres a big whole in the spectrum and i dont what to add any more instruments cause i like the song the way it is. does anyone still use the delay trick to get stereo sound? does it make sense to do the delay trick to make a sound wider and then pan it or was it just meant to be left in the middle with a wider sound?
Yeah, you got three very midrange instruments there, for sure. Not that there's anything wrong with that!

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Without hearing just what you got, one can't super specific, but I'd probably attack it this way:
Assuming you have the vocals sounding good, I'd probably leave them alone, at least for starters. Then compare the piano to the guitar. Ask yourself three questions: 1) Does the piano spend more energy on the left hand than the guitar does on the lower strings or vice versa, 2) Which of those two instruments sounds warmer/fuller in general versus which one sounds brighter/crisper in general, and 3) What is the relationship between the two instruments in the arrangement?
The answers to 1) and 2) should guide you as to how you might EQ each one to give them a little more individual personality. The lower/fuller track might get some subtractive EQ on the high end and the higher/brighter one might get some subtractive EQ on the low end. Maybe.
As far as #3 and the arrangement, the question is do both instruments have to be playing at fairly similar levels at the same time? I've done mixes that have had two acoustic guitars, two electrics, a piano and an organ (plus other instruments and vocals) all going at the same time, and it just winds up a mess because the arangement was not planned; each track was treated as if it were a lead track almost. That doesn't usually work very well.
In such cases, often times less is more. Vary the levels of each track with automation to showcase one track over another as the music or the performance calls for it, and don't be afraid to mute entire phrases or measures of one track or another here or there.
As afr as the setreo delay stuff, I'd leave that alone until the very end of the process, if at all. That won't help much fill holes or clean up mud. If the mix has a big spare tire around the middle of the spectrum now, widening the stereo won't help that and could only introduce holes in the pan space to go with the holes in the spectrum. IMHO, get the instruments behaving well together first, and only after that decide whether spacial tricks will give it that extra edge or push it over the edge (Hint: with only three instrument/vocal tracks, you probably don't need to space them into seperate zip codes

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G.