S
ste20man
New member
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has some advice for me. There are 3 things at the moment that I'm not sure of.
Do you use compression all the time. I have guitar audio that has a lot of headroom. Do I need to compress it? I think I got a good recording, and there were no wild peaks. In general, is it better to leave thing un-compressed. Does it sound more live / interesting?
With EQ, in general, if you can cut frequencies in say, a pad, without hearing any difference, should you do it? As long as it's character remains, should you get rid of all the frequencies that you don't hear to make room in the mix?
I'm still on my first mix and am having problems with the bass and how it's sitting. It's not cutting through enough. It's not too muddy but I would like to hear it more. I'm using Trillian aet the moment but it doesn't have the prescence when it's in the mix.
I find myself moving the fader up bit by bit and then doing that somewhere else to compensate for the rise in volume. then eventually starting again.
Can anyone give me their views or point me to an online reference that you would consider the best you've come across. Something that everyone would agree, this is where you want to be reading.
Currently reading 'Secrets of the small studio' by Mike Seior which is seems to be very good.
That probably a lot of question but I really want to progress and this site by far the best I've found. Always good advice. i'm always reading but I'd also appreciate any help, cheers, Ste.
I was wondering if anyone has some advice for me. There are 3 things at the moment that I'm not sure of.
Do you use compression all the time. I have guitar audio that has a lot of headroom. Do I need to compress it? I think I got a good recording, and there were no wild peaks. In general, is it better to leave thing un-compressed. Does it sound more live / interesting?
With EQ, in general, if you can cut frequencies in say, a pad, without hearing any difference, should you do it? As long as it's character remains, should you get rid of all the frequencies that you don't hear to make room in the mix?
I'm still on my first mix and am having problems with the bass and how it's sitting. It's not cutting through enough. It's not too muddy but I would like to hear it more. I'm using Trillian aet the moment but it doesn't have the prescence when it's in the mix.
I find myself moving the fader up bit by bit and then doing that somewhere else to compensate for the rise in volume. then eventually starting again.

Can anyone give me their views or point me to an online reference that you would consider the best you've come across. Something that everyone would agree, this is where you want to be reading.
Currently reading 'Secrets of the small studio' by Mike Seior which is seems to be very good.
That probably a lot of question but I really want to progress and this site by far the best I've found. Always good advice. i'm always reading but I'd also appreciate any help, cheers, Ste.